The Ramsey Show - Don’t Be Another Statistic in the Debt Disaster
Episode Date: June 18, 2024💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! Dave Ramsey & Dr. John Delony answer your questions and discuss: "How can I operate my business without debt?" "Can we move to get ou...t of my wife's toxic job situation?" The best way to "lower" credit card debt, Insurance vs. investments, "Everyone seems to be winning except me," Dave's message to congress Support Our Sponsors: NetSuite Zander Insurance Christian Healthcare Ministries Churchill Mortgage Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! 📖 Your summer reading list is here. Don’t miss these (cool) summer reads! Beat the heat with bestselling books that will make 2024 your best summer yet. 🚢 The Live Like No One Else Cruise is booking fast! Listen to more from Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
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Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people
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Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, number one best-selling author, is my co-host today.
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He's our Ph.Dd around here helps folks with
counseling issues and it's going to work right into everything we do here today for sure open
phones at 888-825-5225 clay is in amarillo texas hi clay how are you good sir how are you better
than i deserve what's up in your world
oh wind's blowing and we're dry that's about it sounds like amarillo yes sir um i'm a rancher
down here i'm 25 um bought my first ranch or bought my only ranch when i was 21 um i had a
question on i follow you guys on social media and stuff like that,
listen to you on the radio, but you talk about not having debt and I'm wondering how
you run an operation without an operating note.
Because even though cattle prices are through the roof right now there's other things that are
expensive as well yeah yeah yeah i'm sitting in a uh a building that's about 600 million dollars
and uh a studio that this studio is probably i don't know 10 million10 million probably. And the way we did that with a $300 million revenue,
we started on a card table in my living room with absolutely no money, just me.
Me, myself, and I.
That was the whole freaking board of directors.
And I started with the promise that I would never borrow money
because I'd gone broke borrowing money.
And because I read the Bible and it said the borrower is slave to the lender.
And I'm a simpleton and I believed it and I'm just not borrowing money.
So the way I have gone from a card table to where I'm sitting today without borrowing money is, it sounds like a Saturday Night Live skit.
But to start with, Clay, I just didn't borrow money.
I mean, that's it, period.
I'm not going to borrow money for anything. Now,
what that means then is, how do I run a business? How do I grow a business like I've grown this one without borrowed money? And that is, I grew it more slowly than some of my friends who are now
out of business because the bank foreclosed on them during COVID. I grew it more slowly than
some people thought I should, who thought they
were smarter than me, who have less money than me now. I grew it slowly, frustrated the crap out of
me because I wanted to go faster because what we do is help people. And gosh, by going slowly,
we're not helping as many people as we could help and that's really frustrating and I grew it slowly because it's all I had because I can only use my profits
to grow with I can only use my profits to buy equipment with I can only use my profits to add
payroll and new team members with it's my only option and it forces me to be very selective it
forces me to say no to a lot of things but then when times are tough i don't have a note
and i'm still here and i'm still growing and we're still the number one brand in the entire space in
the nation there's no one even close to us with the social media footprint in the space that we're still the number one brand in the entire space in the nation there's no one even
close to us with the social media footprint in the space that we're in or the the podcasting
or the youtube footprints or the revenue that we produce and the the amount of people interacting
with every dollar nobody's even close we freaking own the space we are the 800 pound gorilla now
but that's the way we got there is we were
a starving little monkey that didn't borrow money you know and so that's it i mean it's not it's not
rocket surgery it's just it's just that is but it's hard to do because you're obviously a sharp
dude i mean who goes and buys a ranch at 21 well it's not a wuss you're obviously a stud man
you're going for it who's out there operating a business like you're already operating at 25 years
old way to go man you know and so you you got ambition you got things you got things you want
to do you have an idea in the shower every morning that you can't do if you don't borrow money
and some of those ideas suck by the way clay how how how much in the hole
are you if you if you put all of your liabilities out on the table how big is how big is the hole
uh about half a million and i know you're not supposed to ask this in the 806 but how big's
your ranch it is 250 okay good for you what are you running on it cattle cows yeah probably because cow prices
you said yeah okay cattle prices are up and so um by the way nine tenths of that is the place
itself yeah of course yeah like it's mortgage i do owe a little bit of money on some cows i've
got two payments left on those but other than that, that's the only debt that I have. Well, you've pretty much avoided debt except for
your real estate mortgage. And so that's far beyond what a lot of people in your world do.
As you know, the farming and ranching world is big on debt. And they think they can't do it if
they don't have an $800 million combine that runs circles by itself with a gps
and does a double backflip at the end of the row it's got a pool in the back i rode in one of those
dave it was air conditioned it was nicer than my car yeah oh way nicer the stereo system's better
oh yeah much better hey uh clay i want you to check out the carbon cowboys these guys that
are changing the way ranching is done and their proposition is you don't have to borrow this kind
of money for the fertilizer for the equipment it's just a radical shift and they're and they're they're net neutraling uh
the dollar their dollar for dollaring it so give them a shot too just to check them out how they're
doing farming it's pretty impressive stuff so what i would tell you this clay is this in the radio
world the broadcast world it's like the farming world in the sense that everybody borrows money
but most people don't make it 10 years they're out of business in a 10-year cycle
because the risk that goes with the borrowed money you feel the pinch that's why you're asking
the question oh yeah i mean we're not struggling but it's no we don't do anything extravagant no
and it but it makes you think you have to stop and think i got this note every time you get ready to
do something you got to think.
I got to make this note.
And last year, it didn't rain.
It got pretty dicey, didn't it?
Oh, yes, sir.
Yeah.
The fires this spring.
Yeah.
That's right.
There's fires.
It's drought.
I mean, it's tough. What we are proposing is not only countercultural in America,
it's super countercultural in the farming and ranching world.
But the ones that do it have a
longer life in business and they have a better quality of life but they grow slower they grow
slower and they don't have you know you don't go from 250 acres to 2,500 in 20 minutes but you have
those if you do it right you have those um anti-fragile moments when, let's say it all goes, let's say there's a bad drought for three years
and you've just kept tortoise in the hair and you just kept plugging along and plugging along
and your ranch got bigger by 10 acres and you bought 15 over here and you bought this.
Eventually, the drought wipes out your neighbors and they have to sell you their ranch for pennies
on the dollar. That's what, if you hang on and hang on and hang on that's what happened here suddenly oh i just tripled my
footprint for very little money because i just went slow yeah the number of times i bought out
vendors inventory of pennies on the dollar the number of times i bought out competitor stuff
at pennies on the dollar over the years because i'm sitting on the cash i got no notes you're
going slow and i'm the only guy that's but boring it's so boring
it's not sexy it's not nobody thinks you're cool you're not on the cover of fast company magazine
you know which by the way has been through four owners this is the ramsey show
what does the future hold for business ask nine experts and you'll get 10 different answers. Economic growth
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That's his latest number one.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
The best way to make the most of your money is by telling it what to do
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out. Every dollar. You can download it for free, and you should. Tyler is in Kansas City. Hi,
Tyler. How are you? I'm doing great. Thanks for taking the call. Sure. What's up? So my wife and
I are particularly in an interesting situation. We are trying to juggle between prioritizing saving up for a house to
get her out of a job that's not the best environment within the next two to three years,
or prioritizing the debt we already have, which is not much, and paying that off now.
And so I'm confused how you getting a house gets her out of a toxic environment.
So with her job, we actually have provided housing on space for where she works.
So as soon as she quits the job, we don't have the housing that we live in.
Okay, so you could rent.
True.
I left university housing, and me and my wife rented a house.
I was a dean of students at a fancy university.
You can do it.
Okay.
So, okay, to further my question then, with the money that we have currently,
should we just, like, go right into renting?
Because the renting expenses are going to be more than what we possibly could afford
in the environment that we're in.
We're saving up about $1,000 a month, not on top of the investing
and all the other steps that we're doing with every dollar and the baby steps, towards a house.
But you can't afford a house.
You can't afford a house.
You can afford the payment on a house, but you can't afford a house.
Do you know the difference?
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
I'm afraid you're going to wake up in six months and have gotten her out of this job, and then y'all got this house payment, and then you got this debt, and then she's up pregnant or y'all gonna have a car emergency and then you can have a mess yeah this is one one
uh toxic environment to another toxic environment okay and i've lived in a house two different times
that i really couldn't afford and it has created so much tension in this in my home that it almost
cost me my marriage i just i can't tell you enough. Don't do that.
Okay.
Go rent a house and let the smoke clear on your marriage, on her,
all that pain, all that toxicity, all that nightmare stuff.
Let that smoke clear, and then it'll give you some time.
What is the nature of the toxicity at the work?
So two factors.
One, she works right now between 15, 70 hours a week in a labor-intensive job.
She's a female. She's 120 pounds, so that's impacted.
Secondly, the position that her authority is in is borderline emotionally abusive, and it's not a good environment.
I mean, there's nothing physically going on, but it's just a really tough environment.
It puts a lot of stress on her personally. I'm not sure I completely understand, because sometimes I hear things
that people say are emotionally abusive, like somebody said, hey, go get your job done. You're
emotionally abusive. No, you're freaking lazy. Go get your job done. That's not emotionally abusive.
Yeah, and so that's not the environment I'm talking about.
I'm talking about like going back on their word or, you know, overworking or under promising
stuff like that. And so that's where I'm personally in a space where, Hey, like I want her out of
this position. How long has she been in this position? She's been in this position and
the current position within the company for the last two years. And how old are
you guys? So I am going on 27 and she's 26. Okay. All right. Well, as far as I'm concerned,
if I'm in your shoes and I've been in similar situations over the years, there are two options.
One is, you know, this is so bad for real. We're not just using the, this is not just discomfort.
There's a difference between discomfort and a toxic environment.
If she's working 120 hours a week and she says, I'm not willing to work 120 hours a
week, or I'm not willing to work 80 hours a week, or I'm not willing, I'm willing to
work this number of hours, then they fire her.
Then that's their option.
But you can just start having like
boundaries. Like when somebody starts speaking to you inappropriately, you say, Hey, whoa,
whoa, you know, you can't talk to me that way. You can fire me, but you can't talk to me that way.
Absolutely. So your wife's ability to say no to her or to this environment is part of the problem, her lack of boundaries.
And, um, that's why, you know, and, and so if she cannot put up reasonable boundaries
to say, okay, I can only work a reasonable number of hours.
I'm 120 pounds.
I can't lift, um, you know, heavy boxes all day long, uh, 16 hours a day.
I can't do that.
I can, I can work eight hours or I can work 10 hours and I like my job and I like the benefits and I like the money you give me and I can do that.
And, and I'm not going to be yelled and screamed at or cussed at. And so you got to talk to
somebody else that way if you're going to, um, and suddenly bullies pull back then and
don't bully as much. That's one option is deal with the situation suck it up and push on through
or the other option is go rent something but going using this situation to justify doing
something stupid and getting your family in a pinch and saying oh the only thing we could do
to get away from this toxic wicked witch of the west is to go buy a house we couldn't afford and
go bankrupt these are two negative options and if you're i'm choosing between two negative options
no let's go with c, none of the above.
And Tyler, I want to double-click on what Dave said because it's really important for the character and the strength of your home.
If you leave an environment because somebody kept beating you down, and you have to – it takes years to heal from abuse.
It disconnects you from yourself.
If she has her head up high and said,
you kept telling me that you were going to hire three people
and you haven't, you're dishonest.
I refuse to do work that I told you I'm physically unable to do.
I can't work 90 hours a week.
Like Dave said, I can work 50.
I can work 60 in limited runs.
And the rest of the time, I got to be with my family.
If y'all can't be people of character and integrity,
I'm going to walk out that door.
And when you walk out like that,
not it's emotional abuse.
No, they're just not telling the truth.
They're lying to you.
But you walk out with your shoulders thrown back.
And that sets the tone for your home that sets the
tone for the next job she applies to it helps you see the world a little more clearly than walking
through disconnected from yourself that's a little bit more of taking the victor position that's right
victim that's right yeah and that that's a setting us setting a solid boundary with people who don't
like boundaries you generally drives them nuts.
And they usually lose their minds, and they may fire you.
I mean, so when people that don't appreciate that they're standing on your property,
they're taking some of your hours, they're taking some of your emotional well-being,
and then you say, you can't do that anymore.
I'm going to set up a boundary.
I'm not going to give you as many hours, and I'm not going to give you my emotional well-being.
You can't stand on my, off my lawn you know you know and when you say that to somebody who's used to getting away with it they generally go
nuts right but i've had a boss that i said if you say these things to me again i'm going to walk
out of that door i've said that and they circle back and said i'm sorry and it was it was offensive
it was rude what they were saying but it was they said i offensive. It was rude with their, but it was, they said, I'm sorry. I won't,
I won't have it again.
And,
but it was,
it never did again,
but it was me just saying,
you can't swear at me in this meeting again.
I'm going to get up and walk out of the room.
And it was,
I'm sorry.
You're right.
I'm sorry.
But so there was just standing up,
but I also had to be prepared,
man.
They could have said,
well,
you can take your bag and walk out that door.
Right.
They could do that too.
Cause they're in that position.
You're in that position.
And you know,
so if you got fired from a place,
you were going to quit. If they kept screw screwing you that's not like a loss no yeah
that's like a gain so you know because you said you can't do this anymore they go okay well instead
of leaving because so i would recommend setting some boundaries at a minimum as a step one and uh
to create to lower the toxicity.
I don't know that you'll get rid of it because you're probably dealing with a moron.
But you can lower the level of moronic influence.
And, you know, really, you can.
Just by limiting.
It's what a boundary does.
I'm putting up a shield here.
You can't come inside this shield.
You know, I'm extending my personal space.
You got all up in my stuff here, and I'm going to create a little room here.
And you're in my personal space.
And when you do that, it changes a lot of stuff for you.
I'd recommend doing that as step one.
Step two is if you get fired or decide you can't take it and you quit,
go rent something cheap and go someplace.
If you got to move out of the city, go move out of the city and rent something cheap.
I don't care.
But don't use it as an excuse to do something stupid.
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Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, host of the Dr. John Deloney Show,
PhD in counseling, and he's here to help. The office hours are open. The phone number is 888-825-5225.
So, John, this is interesting to me. I've been doing this show since 1992.
So, 32 years.
And the first year we went on the air, there was a huge problem in America with credit card debt.
And there's still a huge problem.
I'm doing no good.
I'm not making any progress.
There's still a huge problem with credit card debt.
Google Trends recently reported in the U.S.
how to lower credit card debt, in quotes,
reached an all-time high as a search item.
For those that don't know, Google as part of the google reports what people
are searching for there it is okay so what this means is that more people than ever before
essentially well since google not ever but since google are searching for how to lower credit card
debt that makes sense in 2024 we now know that credit card debt has gone over a trillion with
a t dollars so how do you pay off your credit
cards fast what do you do well this is what we've been doing as a matter of fact if uh you like
google dave ramsey the first thing you're going to hear is how to get out of debt right john i mean
it's like i'm they may not know i know how to do anything else but they know i know how to do that
right on your license plate it actually is it says zero debt yeah on my license plate on a very nice
car and so but
that's because the car doesn't have debt that was the message because you can't drive a car like
that unless you have debt everybody knows that but you can't drive a car like that if you've got debt
and so here's an interesting thing here's something for you to think about folks we live We live in the most marketed to society culture in the history of mankind.
In the United States of America, you receive more marketing impressions across your eyes and ears in a given day, more money is spent, more brain power and sophistication is spent
to sell you things than any group of humans in the history of mankind ever at this moment.
Marketing, selling things to you in ads, in Google pop-ups, or whatever it is you want to do,
whatever ad, whatever version of advertising or marketing you want to think about,
you get a diet out there of that that's greater than man has ever gotten any time in history.
No one has ever walked the earth that has been hammered like you've been hammered by marketing.
That's a pretty bold and big statement, but it's also true.
It's not hard to figure it out that that's the truth.
And here's what's interesting.
Among all of that, the most dollars that are spent to sell a single product line more than any other product line, any other mindset,
any other thing you want to sell, any other brand you want to sell out there,
the most advertised and marketed product in dollars and in brain power,
by far in the most marketed to culture in the history of mankind is debt more money is spent to sell you on getting in debt
in the most marketed to culture in the history this is not this is a big deal in other words
when you add up what mastercard american express discover and visa spend in a year
it's more than all the professional sports
make in a year.
It's more than Egypt takes in for their entire economy in a year.
Just to sell you those four pieces of plastic.
And they are good at it.
The things just magically show up in your mailbox your inbox your dead
dog from four years ago will be issued its own line of credit and it'll show up in a credit
card on your mailbox frou-frou the dead poodle will get a credit card in america today i've got
it i've got a copy of frou-frou the deadoodle's Dog. A guy sent it to me from New Orleans.
And a guy in North Carolina applied with a fraudulent social security number under the name Buck Naked
and was issued a $20,000 line on a Visa card.
Wow.
Because they don't even look.
They don't even check your credit.
But about one out of ten of the applications. a Visa card. Wow. Because they don't even look. They don't even check your credit on about,
but about one out of 10 of the applications. And so they issue these pieces of plastic like water going down a drain. And you're walking around like I'm somebody because they,
you're not somebody you don't even necessarily breathe for you to get a credit card. You don't
even necessarily have to be a breathing human to get a credit card. You don't even necessarily have to be a breathing human
to get a credit card.
I've just proven that to you.
These are not made-up stories.
It's the most aggressively marketed product in America today,
and people are walking around going,
I have a platinum, titanium, plutonium American Express card
that you can't even cut up because it's made from plutonium.
Dave, can I tell you something embarrassing?
In college when I got out and I had student loan debt and I was broke.
Oh, I did.
No, I did.
I got a gold Amex.
I got a card.
I'm not lying to you.
I called the number on the back and said,
I need to talk to an account executive.
They sent me through. I told her lying to you. I called the number on the back and said, I need to talk to an account executive. They sent me through.
I told her, thank you.
I thanked her for taking a chance on me.
And she was like, you know, we just felt like,
and I was like, hey, it's pretty awesome.
And she's recording the call.
They're playing it back the next morning.
Oh, they're playing it right now.
They're playing it right now.
They're like, see, we're doing a service.
I thanked her, man. So what we teach people is here's wells fargo bank have plastic surgery don't fall for this you are a sucker to the man you're a
sucker to the largest marketing machine ever known to man what's in your wallet money that's what's in my wallet money because i don't
have this crap in my wallet i don't have to go to the chiropractor because there's 73 credit cards
in my wallet and i sit sideways every day with my back pocket you know and my so my back's out
of alignment i've actually found people that did that.
Their back healed.
It's the George Costanza wallet.
Yeah, when they got rid of this.
So plastic surgery, having a plasectomy will change your life.
Dave, you don't have any credit cards?
I don't have any credit cards.
I haven't had any credit cards for 40 years.
How do you?
By the way, I just got back.
I took a little tour from London to Iceland, and I just got back i took a little tour from london to iceland and i just got back day before yesterday and you know what i have a credit card it was amazing you
know what they took over there debit cards just like credit cards they had no difference and did
the currency exchange did the whole thing and and i actually had uh you know a big old wad of cash
in my pocket because I always care.
Because American dollars are taken almost everywhere.
It's amazing.
They find a way to take them.
You know, if you go, you know, you can go in the poorest country in the world and they'll go, yeah, I'll take that.
But very few times, you know, I found a few people that snooted me and said, you need a euro sometimes in Europe.
But most of the time you just walk around with a dollar.
But, I mean, everywhere I was they took plastic. And so I I obviously had no issue and I just dropped my little debit card in there
I have four pieces of plastic in my wallet a debit card on my business a debit card on my
personal account my driver's license and my handgun carry permit that's all that's in my
wallet other than green president's faces and lots of those. Of different kinds, by the way. I like to click different colors or different faces on there.
So, guys, don't fall for this crap.
And don't tell me your debit card is not safe.
It's got the exact same fraud protection, exact same fraud protection as your credit card.
Go look it up on Visa.com.
It's called a zero liability policy.
Look it up on MasterCard.com.
They both have the exact same phrasing on their websites, like they were owned by each other or
something. But the debit cards got the exact same stuff. Listen, shut up. You're not going to get
rich borrowing money at 18%. That's just straight up stupid on a string, okay? You've got to make
a decision. I'm not going to live like this.
And these people, they're stupid, man.
They just keep doing it.
Look at this one.
New Wells Fargo credit card program with a novel feature.
You can use it to pay your rent, but it may not be working out quite as well as the Bank at Hope. Wells Fargo is losing as much as $10 million a month on this new card.
So you're telling me people that pay rent with their credit cards,
a credit card that was designed to help them pay rent that they couldn't afford.
Oh, wait, so you're loaning money to broke people
and you're bitching because they don't pay it.
Shut up, Wells Fargo.
You're getting what you deserve.
You signed up for this trip.
Guys, boys and girls, really, you got to decide.
Are you going to be like everybody else?
Everybody else is walking around collecting airline miles.
Millionaires, they stack cash.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Hey, when you go against what society thinks is, quote, normal, like avoiding debt, for example,
it might seem weird at first, and that is totally okay.
We want you to be weird if that means doing things intentionally, including how you spend
your health care dollars. And one way to be intentional is with Christian health care
ministries. CHM isn't health insurance. They're a health cost-sharing ministry that's helped
hundreds of thousands of families like yours
take care of health care costs without sacrificing their freedom. Find out more and join at
chministries.org slash budget. That's chministries.org slash budget.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today. Dave is in Orlando.
Hi, Dave.
How are you?
Hi, Dave.
I'm doing great.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Great.
So my wife and I are really excited.
So we are adopting our two foster kids.
Awesome.
Way to go.
Thank you very much.
We are super excited.
They are two and three years old brothers, and we just couldn't be happier.
So it should happen in August.
And my question is, you know, we've always tried to be really financially smart and good with our finances.
Obviously, we want to pass that on to our kids. But being that they are
in the system, they are going to get money every month, $650 a month per child until they're 18.
And naturally, this is their money. I want to keep it for them. So my question is,
what is the best way to go ahead and save this for them? Should I open up a brokerage account
in their name? Should it be an UTMA? I was looking into a 529, but that's actually not needed because they're exempt from paying
tuition in Florida. So what are your thoughts? What should I do? What's your household income?
Right now it's 230. Okay. All right. You're welcome to do whatever you would like to do.
I would not do what you're doing.
You're going to discover very quickly that it costs a whole lot more than $650 a month to raise a kid.
And so I would dump the $650 a month into the budget and then just raise the kids.
And as a part of raising the kids, I'm going to invest and become wealthy
and leave them a big old pile of money and have some money for them
when they come out of college and have some money for them but you're not morally ethically and
certainly not legally bound to set this money aside for them and you're it it's not inherently
unholy to just mix it into the family budget because you're spending more than that on them
by far you're going to spend a lot more than that on them okay yeah that
was that was actually so that was my my wife's thoughts when when we uh talked about this or
she had that idea as well so 529 is not needed but you know if you just have mutual funds that
are not in retirement that you're investing in and those funds are nicknamed you know i'm going to leave
that make sure this is to help them get their first house this is to help them get started
after they get married and they're 25 right um and you know you you dump some money in there
occasionally and you try to you know and then when they because you're going to be a multi-millionaire
if you're doing the stuff we're teaching it sounds like you're very responsible you're making a
quarter of a million dollars a year and so you know if you've got a couple of
accounts like you got a couple of accounts laying around they got a couple hundred thousand bucks
in them that are kind of earmarked for the kiddos and you're going to help them buy their first
house or you're going to help them do whatever out of that then but there's no uh compulsion to
keep it completely separate and clean morally eth ethically, legally, or anything.
People do that with child support sometimes, or they do it with if a spouse passes away,
you get Social Security money for the spouse that passed away to the kids.
They get big checks, or not big checks, but good checks like you guys are getting.
And so, you know, that kind of stuff. And in all all those cases we just say there's no need to mix
child support just mix it in the budget there's no need to uh take social security money and hold
it aside just mix it in the budget and you get what you guys are doing you're going to be such
great moms and dads because your heart is so pure on this you guys are amazing thank you for for
what you do what you're doing and those kids are blessed to have you thank you very much yeah i'm
gonna try not to cry but but we love them so much you know and we weren't able to have kids
biologically but but now that we're here and everything we've gone through we we know it was
it was all for a reason and we just couldn't be happier and um just just one last comment you know
we we are um baby steps millionaires already so so we are, you know, on a good path.
And last thing with the kids, we're getting $10,000 for each kid because I am a veteran as well.
So I'm assuming with that, too, we'll just throw it into our budget and they'll be set up.
Yeah.
And, you know, again, your biggest thing here is not the actual dollars that you leave them as you know your
biggest thing is to transfer your value system which got you where you are called hard work and
thrift and generosity these are your your financial values you work hard you you don't you know you've
studied hard to get to be who you are you you know, uh, teach them those things, teach them,
live on less than you make, teach them, live on a budget with a plan, teach them,
you know, when you were three and we adopted you, we started thinking right then about you paying
about paying cash for your first house so that you never are in debt. And that will set you guys up
to be millionaires real quickly. But that comes with some strings.
It comes with you being a good human because I'm not going to give you this money if you're doing heroin.
Yeah.
You know, and so this is just you weave this whole narrative of handling money wisely as a part of your parenting structure.
And, John, that does change everything, doesn't it?
Yeah.
I'm just um
i'm i'm just overcome a little bit man i'm getting choked up a little bit but
with the with the level of gratitude for a family like dave who took one of the most painful
experiences um unable to have kids and they grieved it and then they said okay what's the next thing for us to do as a family
and they're gonna adopt two uh two two little brothers and um it's beautiful now and i know
it's gonna be hard i mean a hard road to hoe and it's pretty amazing thing that they're doing
but i think you're right i think parents get so caught up in stuff i want to be able to give them
this thing and give them this thing. And man,
the greatest gift you can give your kids is a living example of values in the real world,
right? Like, let him see you tip well. Let him see you honor that waitress who's
the only person running all these tables and the food wasn't that great. Like,
let the kids see you be who you are. And man man, money's awesome, money's nice, but let's transfer values.
Let's transfer values.
There you go.
Love it.
Steve's in Wilmington, Delaware.
Hi, Steve.
How are you?
Oh, Dave, thanks.
Dr. John, thanks for taking my call.
I appreciate it.
Sure.
How can we help?
I feel like I'm stuck in the mud.
I read your book, Total Money Maker, the new one.
I've been following the steps.
I think I'm on baby step four, but somehow I got backwards,
and my emergency fund that I feel is in a brokerage account
and a smart investor fund.
So my question to you is should i leave that there and rebuild the emergency fund
in a money market account i think i could fund it probably in three to four months for sure
that's fine and and but you do need a separate emergency fund here's what happens
that i had to learn because it killed me. The first time I ever saved $10,000
and I had to name it an emergency fund instead of an investment. And I put it in a stupid
money market account and it wasn't making anything. And then I could start investing
the first time I did that because it's the only $10,000 I'd ever had in my life.
Or since I've been broke anyway, since I went broke, it was the only's the only $10,000 I'd ever had in my life or since I've been broke anyway since I went broke is the only time I had $10,000 and I'd worked so hard to get
that $10,000 and now I gotta not invest it for a math nerd that just broke my heart right and I
had to figure out that the emergency fund the purpose of it of that $10,000 in that example
is not an investment.
The emergency fund, I always make when I'm doing live events, I make the crowd say,
not an investment.
4,000 people say, not an investment, right?
It's insurance.
Everybody say insurance.
Insurance, right?
And what does insurance do?
It costs you money to protect the things that make you money.
That's what insurance does. And that's what your emergency fund does it sucks if you look at it as an investment it's not an
investment though it's insurance and so the money that you're not making what we call opportunity
costs because it's in a high yield savings instead of in a brokerage account the money you're not making is your cost
of that insurance policy i call it my soul tax i pay four to five percent every month to sleep
soundly yeah and i love it yeah that's it so yeah steve that's a technicality in your case because
you've got it dialed in you know what's going on your intellect has grasped what you're supposed
to do so yeah just get your high yield savings account and dump three to six months of expenses in there as your emergency fund.
And just any time you look at it and want to puke a little,
just say, not an investment.
It's not an investment.
It's insurance.
And when I buy homeowner's insurance, I don't say, oh, that was fun.
I always go, it's something I've got to do because it's smart to protect that asset,
but it costs me money to protect that asset.
That puts this hour of the Ramsey Show in the books.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions,
it's the Ramsey Show where we help people build wealth,
do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
Thanks for hanging out with us, America. We're glad you're here. Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Number one best-selling author of the book, Building a Non-Anxious Life,
PhD in Counseling, and host of the Dr. John Deloney Show.
Ramsey Personality is my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Jump in and we'll talk to you about your life and your money.
Hillary is with us.
Hillary is in Salt Lake City.
Hi, Hillary.
How are you?
I'm good.
Thanks.
I appreciate the chance to be able to talk to you.
Honored to speak with you. How can we help?
So I just see a lot of people my age or younger bragging and boasting about their nice cars, houses, and vacations.
And I just feel like I'm losing at life.
I live a pretty humble lifestyle, but what am I doing wrong?
How do I afford this?
You said people your age.
What is your age?
I'm 33.
Okay.
You're single?
Yes.
Okay.
What do you make?
I make $60,000 before taxes.
Good for you.
What do you do?
I'm a health educator.
Cool.
Fun.
All right.
Do you have a lot of debt?
I actually have no debt except for my mortgage, which I only owe $140,000.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
All right.
Well, this is the problem that the millennial, your generation,
was one of the first ones to really, really struggle with it.
Rachel Cruz, my daughter, wrote a number one best-selling book um talking about this whole thing of the power of social media and the power of it used to be that we would say don't keep up
with the joneses have you ever heard that old saying of course yeah and but the problem was in those days, you know, it wasn't as hard to keep up with the Joneses
because they lived next door, and you saw them drive in their car,
but you also saw them have a big fight.
And you also knew that their kids were messed up, and you knew this and you knew that.
So, you know, when they got a car, it wasn't as big a deal
because you kind of knew some of the dirt too, right?
But on social media, the only thing you're looking at is the highlight reel. they got a car it wasn't as big a deal because you kind of knew some of the dirt too right but
on social media your only thing you're looking at is the highlight reel you're only looking because
nobody posts on there how my husband just got me a 1992 honda hashtag blessed you know nobody does
that right and nobody posts the three weeks after the beach vacation and the fight around the
credit card bill and we can't buy groceries and diapers yeah they don't post that
and so what you're seeing what you're seeing and really our whole culture uh even old people like
me that look at social media we all can fall prey to this because we're not seeing reality
what we're seeing is only what you know have you ever seen these pictures of these little
like all the little children in the little like they're five and four and six and they're all
like wearing little white suits and they're on a picnic blanket and they're at the park and it's
like oh we're at the park when i went to the park with three kids it looked
like freaking wrinkling brothers and barnum and bailey circus one of them's in the mud the other
one's pulling the other one's hair we wouldn't have had a picture like that a million years
can you imagine taking rachel cruz at four years old to the park and expecting her to behave
not a chance i don't know how these people get those are those mannequins how do they get them
to sit like that?
Take that picture.
And that's what you're comparing to.
They push a button now and it takes a thousand pictures at once and it catches one.
And it's like, that's it, right?
Hey, so Photoshop their own kids.
Hillary, where are you seeing this?
Are you seeing it on social media?
Are your friends texting you about it?
Where are you seeing it?
Just kind of everywhere.
I mean, social media is a big part of it obviously with tiktok and instagram and facebook but also just you know at work
someone says oh i'm going to the bahamas for two weeks or oh look at my new escalade and it's just
like have you ever been to the bahamas no but i'm like your escalade cost more let me just tell you
there's a couple places there that are nice but there's a whole lot of dumpy crap with one good picture on the website, too.
I mean, it looks like 1960s Holiday Inn down there a lot of times.
Be careful with that one.
I love the Bahamas.
I just love it.
But anyway, yeah.
I mean, even Atlantis is getting really old.
I'm just saying.
Here's, Hillary, here's the, I think it's a both and.
Yeah.
That Escalade is actually really an amazing car.
They're very nice.
And 99% chance that's not real money that bought that.
And so if you just called into the show and said, I'm a 33-year-old single female.
I make 60 grand.
I only have 120 grand left on a house I bought myself.
We would be going, touchdown! We touchdown celebrate you as like the model like i i i'm looking and saying i hope my daughter josephine is in that kind of situation if she finds herself 33 making 60 grand in utah
and she's unmarried i hope she's exactly in the situation you're in that'd be amazing you're
amazing you've done a great job you're doing it right i guess you're the indie filmmaker and all you have is a camera and you're telling real stories and you can't compete with
the godzilla movies that are made in computer labs that's what you're doing well it makes me feel
better because i just you know and i also recently just paid cash for my master's degree and so all
that money that i have saved i'm just like that could have been a vacation or a car i shouldn't
have done that dude you just put an investment in yourself for the next 50 years of your life?
You traded a master's degree for Bahamas.
This is a good trade.
I hope so.
Oh, man.
But, yeah, I guess it's nice to have some reassurance.
Yeah, and here's the other thing.
I had to go through the thing when I was a little bit younger than you
when I went broke.
I was 28, and I was driving younger than you when I went broke. I was 28.
And I was driving a Jaguar when I went broke.
And it broke my heart to drive a hoopty after that.
And I drove this horrible old vehicle.
But I, by then, had become so disgusted with me and how I was behaving, like the people you're talking about, I was buying stuff that for other people look at. And I got all that completely fried out
of my soul when I went broke and I don't buy anything now for anybody except for Sharon and me.
I don't even care if my kids like it. As a matter of fact, I kind of like it if they don't like it.
So, uh, I just buy, I buy stuff a hundred percent. I kind of like it if they don't like it so I just buy I buy stuff a
hundred percent I drove a really nice car today because I really like that car I don't even care
if anybody sees it I like the car and I had a good time driving it here and that's the only reason I
buy it so but I used to have to pull up in those hoopties I drove a car that was loaned to me that was at 90 bondo and it the vinyl roof
was torn loose across the front so when you drove it it filled up with air looked like a parachute
on top and so i would pull up at a stoplight after having driven a jaguar and the top would
settle deflate it would deflate come back down at the stoplight meanwhile i'm sitting next to people in nice cars that just
got home from the bahamas and i'm looking at them going what am i doing wrong and uh what i finally
realized that today if you did that if you pulled up next to somebody to stop by today
the average car payment at that stoplight is 750 dollars see i like what you said. Yes. Your verbal comment was perfect.
You're winning, Hillary.
Okay, Hillary, can I poke at one quick thing before we go to break?
Sure, sure.
How much of these videos you're seeing, these pictures you're seeing of these trips are reinforcing a sense of loneliness?
Probably a lot,
because I feel like they just can go do whatever, you know?
Okay, I want that to be where your emphasis is,
not on trying to get the vacation.
Should I get a master's degree and pay for it with cash
or go on vacation?
Of course get the master's.
I want you to start creating opportunities
to have friends and community and connection and laughter
right where you live.
Start cultivating
that and it's going to make the other shiny stuff. It's just going to not be that big a deal.
You're right where you need to be. Buying your first home is a big deal and sets the stage for
your financial success. So work with a mortgage advisor you trust, not just some random website.
Churchill Mortgage is Ramsey trusted because they
help you avoid hidden traps and expertly guide you through every step. Learn more at
churchillmortgage.com. This is a paid advertisement. NMLS ID 1591. NMLS consumeraccess.org.
Equal housing lender. 1749 Mallory Lane, Suite 100, Brentwood, Tennessee 37027.
A couple of books to tell you about or remind you of.
For one thing, many of you are looking for the simple, straightforward plan to get out of debt, work the baby steps.
Well, the book that taught everybody the baby steps is called The Total Money Makeover. We're celebrating that book because, wow, now it's actually, what is it, 20 years, 25 years old, 20 years old,
whatever it is, we're celebrating the anniversary of the book. And it's just came out with a new
version of it, updated it. And for $20, you get the total money makeover and three months of every
dollar premium for free. So for less than a movie ticket or a few drinks at Starbucks,
you can invest in changing your life.
Go to RamseySolutions.com,
get the new anniversary edition of the Total Money Makeover.
It includes three months of the premium version of every dollar.
Also, one of my best friends in the world is a guy named Dr. Henry Cloud
that wrote a book called Boundaries,
and he's a good friend of John's cloud that wrote a book called boundaries and he's
a good friend of john's as well uh well-known psychologist boundaries is what made henry a
household name for some of you he's also written plenty of other books um necessary endings
integrity or two that come to mind and um always about relationships and and uh business and uh
you know he's a psychologist and so he's always writing
in those veins, and he did something a little risky for him, and he sent me the manuscript,
and I read it about six months ago when he was in the middle of it, and I had tears running
down my face.
It is, I read everything that Henry writes.
Number one, he's a world-class thinker and author, but number two, he's a good
friend. And this is a book completely different than anything he's ever done. It's called Why
I Believe, A Psychologist's Thoughts on Suffering, Miracles, Science, and Faith.
So it's my good friend Henry explaining why he believes in God,
because he runs in an intellectual world, a bunch of nerds, and he said, I've always wanted to
tell my friends these things, but I sometimes lose the courage to do it in person, and I can't find
the right venue, and it it's uncomfortable and they always wonder
these things about me because they know i'm a person of faith but they didn't know why
and they couldn't couldn't juxtaposition that with their science knowledge you know yeah henry and i
were talking a few weeks ago and i haven't seen him this clear-eyed and excited about getting a
book out i mean this one's sitting on his chest and it's it sounds
pretty remarkable i can't wait to dig into it yeah his last book was the number one number best
or number one or a national bestseller as well trust it just came out about a year ago i guess
and uh all about how to build trust and how to regain trust after it's broken and those kinds
of things we had him on the show talking about that but this is completely uh it's a departure for him and i highly recommend it why i believe
it's very well done it's uh if you ever wondered oh there it is you ever wondered why bad things
how can a god exist if bad things happen oh yeah that's classic doctrinal juxtaposition there right
so um how is it that we could have little children suffering
and there be an all-loving God?
How is that possible?
How can you figure that out and work that through
from a philosopher's viewpoint or a theologian's viewpoint?
Yeah, it's very interesting.
So Henry, as a psychologist, tackles all this.
Why, I believe, is a brand-new book that comes out today,
but I recommend it highly.
Christie is with us. No, I believe. It's a brand new book. It comes out today, but I recommend it highly. Christy is with us.
No, I'm sorry.
Chassidy.
Chassidy is with us.
I'm sorry.
I got half looked at.
In San Francisco.
Hi, Chassidy.
How are you?
I'm so good.
How are you guys today?
Better than we deserve.
What's up?
So I kind of had an awakening moment today.
I kind of threw my hands up in the air, and I'm of had a, uh, awakening moment today, kind of threw my hands up in the air and
I'm totally at a loss. So I'm calling in to, uh, get some advice on a credit card. Of course. Um,
I have a $13,000 credit card. Actually it was 15,500. Um, and I started the baby steps and I got it down to 13, seven. Um, but it's a credit
card with interest rate of 26.9. I think, um, I got it when I was younger, uh, but I've had it
for like 10 years and it's gotten its way, way up there. And now I'm starting to be like, uh,
how do I get this down? The interest rate is so high.
Every month it goes up to $330 interest alone.
Minimum payment of $450.
So I'm just kind of really upset with myself.
I have a lot of anxiety and it's kind of just gotten out of control.
I've tried, I'm thinking about doing the balance transfer, but then you were like, no,
it's just, you know, I just don't know what to do. What do you make, what's your income?
So it kind of differs because I'm a flight attendant and my hours are kind of all over the place, but this month I'm making probably 5,000 without taxes taken out.
Um,
so probably 60,000 a year.
Um,
and I don't have a lot of,
a lot of other things.
It's just the credit card.
My car's paid off.
I do pay $1,600 in rent because of San Francisco.
But I really don't have anything else other than this stupid credit card.
How did you end up in San Francisco as a flight attendant?
Well, I was kind of lost because I don't have a college degree.
And I was like, how am I going to be able to make it in the world?
I love traveling, so I just jumped into it.
How did you end up in San Francisco, though?
Being a flight attendant in San Francisco is unusual.
We have huge bases in these big cities, New York, San Francisco,
those kind of places, so I just got stuck with San Francisco kind of.
Oh, they assigned it where
they put me could you transfer to a much much cheaper place to live no a lot and I've been
I have a transfer in right now to Houston okay yeah that would be like half yeah yeah but um
I'm kind of stuck here at least for a year because I am in a lease. Okay.
Is your schedule so inflexible that you don't know?
Let me ask this.
Do you find days?
I know a month.
Okay.
I know a month in advance, yeah.
So, like, next month I'm only making $39,000.
So what are you doing in your off days?
On your off days, yeah.
So the FAA has regulations on how much we can work.
We can only work six days in a row. So on my off days, I'm at home.
So the thing I know about anxiety is the more you think about it,
the more powerful it becomes.
And the only way I've seen anybody be successful,
myself included, dealing with anxiety
is to head directly through the middle of it with action.
And so my challenge to you would be,
if you already know,
I'm gonna have $3,900 next month,
which is about 1100 bucks less money
than I normally bring home.
You could already be lining up Uber jobs, Uber Eats jobs.
Is that sexy? No. Does anybody want to be doing that? No. But you could drive from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
stuck in that car making a chunk of money and you could have this debt knocked out like in three or
four months and it'd be gone from your life. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, it's just...
I know.
And this is where my anxiety comes into play.
Because I was paying $1,000 on it
like before when I started the baby step.
Hold on, hold on.
I'm just going to stop you right there.
I'm going to stop you right there.
Anything that happened yesterday,
I want to wipe it off.
Because it's just bleeding all over today.
Let's simply make a plan moving forward
and act on that plan.
What you know is you're going to have fewer days
to work next month.
You're going to be at home, just sitting at home.
Why not take one of those mobile jobs
that came out of your area and just get after it?
It will be uncomfortable.
Yes. Annoying.
Yes. All those things.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
And we're playing a 120 day game four months down the road we're gonna not owe this debt anymore
because we worked really hard for four months you see what i'm saying your anxiety will go down
when you're working all the time your anxiety will go down when you're paying off the debt
that's giving you anxiety and see dave, my family's kind of like you.
They're like, you just need to go to work.
You need to get over it.
No, no, no.
I didn't say get over it.
No, not get over it.
I said go to work.
Go through it.
Don't get over it.
Don't get over it.
Go through it.
Go through it.
But what's wrong with going to work?
No, nothing.
Okay, good.
Good, because that's what you got to do, kiddo.
That's the's answer your question
because otherwise you're just sitting on the couch worrying and you're worried about this
this big pile of anxiety on the couch a race who cares about the interest rate just go straight
through it 13 000 bucks you can knock this out you paid off in three months interest rates
irrelevant mathematically doesn't matter that's right this This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today.
Steve's with us in Boston.
Hi, Steve.
How are you?
Good.
How are you doing?
Better than I deserve, sir.
What's up?
So a couple years ago, my wife passed away unexpectedly after having her second child. Um, so I'm finally mentally, I think in a place where I can go back to the finances and try to tackle what we had
begun. Um, my question becomes it's student loan based. Should I withdraw funds from my TSP to pay off my student loans and just move forward with
everything from that point starting fresh or maintain my TSP and just make larger payments
into student loans. Wow. How old are you? 40. How old was she?
Same age.
When she passed, she was 38.
Yeah.
What was her name?
I'd rather not. Oh, okay.
Good call.
Good call.
Okay.
And it was childbirth?
Yeah.
He was born substantially premature,
so he had probably five months in a NICU.
And he still has some medical issues.
But she passed during childbirth, is what you're saying?
Yeah, shortly after, within a day or two.
Okay, I'm so sorry, Steve.
What do you do, man?
So I work for the government, actually.
And TSP, yeah.
And so what's your income?
Salary, $105,000.
And then I collect VA disability on top of that and that's about 30
a year okay so you got 145 000 to work with and you what savings you had um the co-pays and the
um out-of-pocket portion that the insurance didn't cover, wiped it out?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, all right.
Were these student loans, any of them hers or are they all yours?
No, they were all mine.
Okay, all right. Okay, all right.
And how much debt is the student loan?
About $115,000, give or take $32,000 federal,
and then the remainder, I think it's 85,000 private okay but 115 total okay
all right yeah and um you I think you said you have two children is that right
yes that's correct okay all right so you have a two-year-old and how old's the other one
uh four okay wow man you you got your plate full brother um
you're amazing i'm so proud of you for just just getting up every morning wow um
um well in the middle of all this uh uh raising two little ones, one of them a preemie, and going through the tragedy that you've been through, I think you've done really well to just be where you are.
Because a lot of people, you could have really done some really dumb things in the last two years and had good reason to have not had your brain working well.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
So I think you've done a really, really good job of holding this together.
Way to go.
Appreciate it.
The mathematical answer and the correct answer is no,
don't take money out of your TSP to clear the 115.
Although what you're trying to say, what I'm hearing in this story is enough
pain already. I don't want any more pain. I've had enough pain. I've got pain. I don't need any more.
I don't want to sacrifice to pay off this student loan debt. I just want this crap to go away.
But the problem is when you pull the money out of the tsp you're going to get the 10 penalty plus your tax rate which is 35 so you're going to pay 45 cents on the dollar to pull this money out
45 interest you're borrowing money at to get rid of your student loan no don't do that
okay that's the answer it's um it would it would temporarily feel really good to have a win, you know.
And so that's what motivates you to think this way, and I'm really glad you called.
I'm going to beg you not to do that, even though I completely understand the pain threshold that you're dealing with.
And so I, you know, what I'm going to do is tighten down the budget and it's going
to take you, you know, if you said 145,000 and we live on 110, then, um, it's going to
take you three years to clean this up.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's what I'm going to do.
You're going to be 43 and you'll be debt free and you'll be continuing to rebuild your life
and have this new version of what tomorrow looks like that you're leaning into, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, I was thinking along the same lines.
I think I just needed somebody to validate it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, listen, have you been through Financial Peace University ever?
No, actually, I haven't.
Okay, I'm going to give that to you as our gift.
I want to come alongside you and let you,
because that will give you a safe place to learn
and even a group of people to be with while they're learning the same things
while you're processing,
because you've been processing a lot in the last 24 months.
Agreed?
100%.
Yeah.
Can you hear us when we tell you that we're proud of you?
Yes, yes.
It's nice to hear.
Believe me.
Because I know you've had a lot of long days and long nights and really dark nights,
and there's nobody there cheering you on when you're changing diapers and you're
changing out you know like you know pick lines whatever you're having to do and we just want to
know we want you to know we see you and we're grateful for you man yeah my son's got a four
year old and none of the other problems and the four-year-old's enough yeah he shows up kind of
haggard sometimes yeah he ain't got none of the other stuff he just got the four-year-old's enough yeah he shows up kind of haggard sometimes yeah he ain't got none of the
other stuff he just got the four-year-old and that's enough i'm just saying just throw in a
two-year-old for the heck of it and mix in some of this other stuff man wow wow you're you're a stud
man hey we're here for you if you need us you call us anytime we love you and you hang on christian
will pick up and we'll get you guys get you signed up for financial peace and we'll walk with you while you move into this next phase of life the way you didn't think
it was going to look ah ouch that's that's one of the few things dave i cannot wrap my head around
i can't wrap my head around going home and having the house be quiet and having my wife not be there
and then think i'm going to make good choices the following minute i just can't wrap my head around it it's tough yeah my heart goes out for people we've designed
our whole estate plan that i die first and there's a reason it's because sharon has a plan
but i can imagine your estate attorney being like uh what happens if dave what happens if you die
sharon is just like that's not gonna happen this dad attorney was like yeah have you seen the way he eats no there's no way I'm not
she walks eight miles every morning there's no chance he's gonna outlive me
oh I can't I can't oh I can joke about it because it keep me from crying but the
I'm with you I can't I can't get my head around that. And the sad thing is on this money stuff is that when tragedy happens,
and you can give tragedy a bunch of different names,
but death of a loved one is certainly tragedy,
the math on this stuff doesn't stop.
No, that's the hardest part, man.
And so the negative math of the debt just keeps piling up and the positive math of the investments just keeps piling up right
money doesn't care right it doesn't have a soul it doesn't give you a day off because you're having
a bad day it doesn't give you um it doesn't take a day off because you're not working hard.
It's the hardest working when you get working for you.
But what you said to this good guy was so true.
Dude, I just want to stop hurting.
I just want to stop hurting.
And sometimes at 11 o'clock at night when the kids are asleep
and I'm just scrolling by myself, I'll take the 45% hit.
I just want this to go away
and I'll be able to breathe again.
I need a win.
And you just need a friend to say,
hey, please don't do that.
Please don't do that.
We'll be your friend.
Yeah.
We'll walk with you, man.
That's what we do.
And we're honored to be your friend
for just a moment here.
That's what we do for America.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Thank you for joining us, America.
Today's question comes from Christian in Tennessee.
My wife and I went to college and racked up significant student loans. The crux of our problem is that part of it was on a Parent PLUS loan that's under her father's name.
Her father and mother would like to get rid of that loan.
They want us to take it on.
We're in no way, shape, or form in a position to take on
what has now turned into a $60,000 loan.
We feel bad, want to help out, but don't know what to do.
I hate Parent PLUS loans.
I do, too.
I do, too.
Thanks for picking me up there. My headphones got all tangled up and uh i was stumbling and bumbling um okay dave tell me
if this rings true with you i'm 18 years old mom and dad have it in their heart that they want to
make me happy so they co-sign for this loan for this thing that's not a co-sign it's a parent
plus loan they just borrowed it they borrow the money for this thing. That's not a co-sign. It's a Parent PLUS loan. They just borrowed it.
They borrowed the money on a thing that we can't afford.
Assuming there was not an agreement around the kitchen table that we're going to take this Parent PLUS loan,
but you're going to be responsible for it.
Now they're realizing, oh, this is a $60,000 loan, and they're not in shape to pick it up,
and we can't keep carrying this thing, so we need y'all to take it on.
At the end of the day, mom and dad signed the loan,
they signed the loan, they signed the loan.
Yeah.
Legally, just from a legal perspective,
obviously Christian does not owe the money.
His mom and dad owe the money, period.
End of story, okay?
So if you just say no, they got to pay it legally.
Now, morally, did you promise them them when or did she promise them her
father and mother um did she promise them that she would take on the loan after she graduated
and they just took the loan out on her behalf on a handshake morally if that's the case then you
have a different kind of a contract, although it is a contract.
It's not a legal contract, but it's a morally binding.
She gave her word, in which case you guys have a loan.
Now, you can't just take on the loan.
You can take on the payments.
You can pay off the loan.
You're not in a position to do that, but you can pay extra payments
and pay off the loan.
You can treat it like it's your loan.
But legally, it never comes out of their name until it's paid off. You can't just decide I'm going to move this to somebody else's name. They don't let you do
that. Okay. And there's not a consolidation that consolidates your loan into my name. There's no
such thing. Okay. So it's going to stay there in their name if you pay payments and you pay extra
payments to get it paid off until it is paid off. But I'm with John. I think the thing that is not
in your question, not in your email here, Christian, is did your wife promise her mom and dad
at the time they took out the loans that she would take it on after graduation if she did then the two of you need to take it on 100 you need to take it on if she didn't then i'm sorry that they
are inconvenienced by their former decisions her mom and dad took on a loan i'm not really sorry
that was sarcasm but yeah um big girl big big big daddy big mama done signed up for this thing, and then they're going to dump it on the kids because I don't like it now?
Yeah.
And to get a Parent PLUS loan,
that means you've taken out a whole bunch of other loans too
that your wife's probably carrying, right?
And if you met at college, you probably got student loans too.
So I can see this whole thing being a big mess.
Dave, and this is why we say this over and over and over and over,
the number of times this turns into a rift in the relationship between parents and their kids is so high.
It's approaching 100%.
Just don't do it because you're going to pay for it relationally down the road.
It's just not worth it.
Don't borrow money for other people and don't co-sign for anything ever under any circumstances.
100% of the time this goes sideways, boys and girls.
My little brother needed a car, so I borrowed the money.
100% of the time.
My boyfriend wanted a car, so I borrowed the money.
100% of the time you end up being a caller on this show and entertain the rest of America with your foolishness.
If your little brother needs a car and you can give him one, it to him but don't borrow money and say okay we're gonna
have a payment plan your kid wants to go to college you want to make them happy teach them
to work don't pick a college they can afford or don't go to college go be a welder i don't care
but don't go in debt go spend 10 grand10,000 and go to code school and make $150,000 of coding.
Okay, but don't go in debt.
This student loan stuff is absolutely stupid.
It's so out of control.
People are putting off having children and buying homes
because of student loans.
We must forgive them, but we continue to make them.
This is so intellectually dishonest.
On one side of these
politicians mouth they whine and cry about the poor little people who have gotten themselves
destroyed by these student loans and it is horrible and now the other side of their mouth
they keep making the stupid loans congress hello if you have screwed up the culture with these loans, stop making them.
Hello?
What other time in history could an 18-year-old go down to the bank
and convince a banker to loan them $145,000 to go play beer pong?
What other time in history could this happen?
Every time in other in history a banker would have looked at you and said,
you're a dadgum fool, there's a great comedian he said it's basically a small business loan
and i'm the business i you shouldn't loan me money
it's it just doesn't make any sense it's the dumbest program ever but it was all predicated
on the idea that education solves everything and education doesn't solve stupidity turns out it exasperates it so especially when you add with
education the idea i need to go to a famous school i need to go to a school that's well known
so now i'm really going to go deeply in debt and get a degree in left-handed puppetry so i can owe 260 000 bucks and be a barista
this is what this crap has created and you and i boys and girls the taxpayers are paying for that
christian i'm so sorry you're in the middle of this mess i'm sorry you just got me riled up but
the um i just hurt for you folks it hurts and it's just just it angers you when you look at $1.7 trillion of this
stupidity floating around, and
Christian and his father-in-law
are now at odds.
Think about that.
Oh, yeah. Thanksgiving dinner does not...
They're not going to be able to go to the holidays. Thanksgiving
dinner tastes different. And when he buys a car,
his father-in-law is going to say...
He's going to look... Oh, he bought a car, but you
didn't... You didn't take care of the loan I took out.
What kind of man are you?
What kind of a terrier are you?
What do you mean?
It's like,
and then you're going to say,
well,
you ain't going to see your grandkids.
You know,
this is where this is going.
I mean,
this,
it doesn't go well.
This doesn't end.
This story is not a pretty story.
And bless his heart.
He's writing on behalf of his wife.
It's her parents
and let's say christian um we talked about this earlier let's say your wife did shook she shook
her parents hand said mom i just have to go to this college so bad and all they'll let me take
out is a hundred grand if y'all take out the other 60 i'll pay you back when i get a job
then you and your wife need to sit down and map out a plan.
To pay this.
And it's going to cost you your quote unquote following your passion.
It's going to cost you your right now dream.
Y'all got to go get a whole bunch of jobs.
And you're going to have to probably get roommates.
Y'all going to have to live a different kind of life than you thought.
Because y'all set this stuff up years ago.
And unfortunately, the world let y'all do this.
Before the world let you buy alcohol, they let you borrow $150,000.
Before the world let you get tattoos.
You can't buy a firearm.
You can't buy a gun or get a tattoo or buy cigarettes.
But man, you can sign this paper right here.
And unfortunately, that's the world you're in.
Math doesn't care how you feel.
Y'all got to figure out a way to get this thing paid off,
and just scratch and claw and get it done.
Your relationship with your in-laws and tension in your family tree is not worth it.
It's just not.
It's not.
If she said she would pay it, if she didn't say that she would pay it,
then you've got a different kind of difficult conversation,
which is, Mom and Dad, she didn't make you a promise to pay this.
We're in no more of a position to pay it than you are.'m really sorry we can't take this on we love you but we can't
take this on and maybe in five years if y'all are successful like having some success maybe you can
start chipping in or something but right now you can't do it you can't do it but not as an
obligation that's an act of charity it's an act of gift yeah it's a gift it's a gift it's not an
obligation there's a different thing here and, but this all gets twisted up.
So parents, stop it.
Stop it.
Look at your 18-year-old, you wuss, and say no.
Parents who are wusses are causing this.
Look at, grow a backbone run down on run down to walmart you can buy one on all three get you a backbone and look at your little 17 year old and say no
no it's a powerful word it'll set the next decade free.
This is the Ramsey Show.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions,
it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth,
do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
Our phone number is 888-825-5225.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, host of the Dr. John Deloney Show,
author of a couple of number one bestsellers.
The latest is Building a Non-Anxious Life.
He's my co-host today.
Open phones, 888-825-5225.
Josh is in Huntsville.
Hey, Josh, how are you?
I'm doing great, Dave. How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
I knew you were going to say that.
John, how are you?
I'm even better than that.
Well, thank you so much for taking my call.
I really appreciate and love what you guys are doing to educate the population on so many levels.
So thank you so much for that. Thank you for taking my call. I really appreciate and love what you guys are doing to educate the population on so many levels. So thank you so much for that.
Thank you.
What's up, man?
How can we help?
I'm kind of at a crossroads.
I'm 27, and I no longer have to work.
That's not exactly what you think, but I'm at a crossroads.
Do I go back to school for free and get paid to do it?
Do I enjoy this type of retirement, or do i just get a passive job i mean where do i go with all this uh that's a little bit vague
sounds like you're out of the military yes yes sir i served in the u.s army and life didn't go
as expected and i really uh got a lot of injuries so that passive income i talked about that's Army, and life didn't go as expected, and I got a lot of injuries.
So that passive income I talked about, that's where that comes from.
So you got vet, you were 100% disabled?
Sure, yeah, we'll say that.
Okay, so what's your income off the military?
So it's non-taxable, it's $4,400 per month.
Okay, cool cool are you single
no i'm lucky i'm married okay good what does she make
uh her gross income is about 36,000 okay
so i go ahead at 86,000 a year you don't have to work anymore. Is that what you're saying?
Yeah, pretty much.
Okay.
All right.
What are the natures of – by the way, thank you for your service.
And I'm sorry you were injured in the course of serving your country.
We appreciate men.
I'd do it again.
We appreciate men and women like you.
What's the nature of your disability, Josh?
It's a long list.
I've got like over 1,000 pages of documentation, but it's both physical, some mental.
I need a total hip replacement.
I'm only 27.
I have knees.
My back is all tore up.
So when it comes to employment, it's a desk job.
And I was a loan officer for a long time.
How's your emotional state?
It's ongoing.
It takes a lot of work to overcome some of the things you've experienced and seen in life.
I bet.
I'm better than I used to be.
I bet.
Well, good for you. You still working on it?
I work on it every day probably for the rest of my life. Outstanding. I like that attitude. Good for you. You still working on it? Yeah, I work on it every day probably for the rest of my life.
Outstanding.
I like that attitude.
Good for you.
Okay.
Well, I think you're asking the wrong question, man.
Can I challenge you to ask a fourth question?
I love questions.
Go for it.
What do you want to do for the next 60 or 70 years of your life?
You know, that's the darndest thing.
People talk about retirement and they wait for retirement
to enjoy their lives sitting around the house having cracked up you know i've cracked up as
everyone says no it's uh it's terrible it's terrible man is designed woman is designed to
do things cow's potato is not a natural state yeah it's not a natural state so yeah john's on
to something here so i i think you start asking yourself okay chapter one was josh was in the
military uh saw some stuff and got the hell beat out of him in the process. Chapter two is Josh takes the income and the free education from that chapter one experience
and goes and becomes a hero in another area.
So what's chapter two?
That's the question.
It's an encore.
You know, like when the band does a really good job and the audience is standing and
cheering so the band comes back out and the curtain comes back up after they've already
played a great concert.
That's the encore,
right?
Yeah.
That's you,
dude.
What's your encore.
And can I tell you my dream for you is when you turn 50 and you and your wife
are celebrating your 25th anniversary,
that one of the lesser impressive things about you
is your military service.
That's my challenge to you.
Yeah, that you went and changed everybody's life
doing something else,
or you went and built this thing doing something else,
or you went and did,
and you're known inside your own head
and inside your group of friends
and people who see you from the outside looking in,
you're known as something
other than what you're known for today. You're hero already you've already got that check mark well done
but now there's a whole nother thing what's the encore so you've thought about it what do you
want to do what do you want to do you've thought about it i don't know how i can top my military
oh easy you know i like business easy okay you like business billion dollar company
yeah i was a millionaire by the time i was 26 but all the property that i owned just about was a
lower income property that's a nice way of saying i was a slumlord
that was my first chapter i was a millionaire by the time i was 26 that's pretty cool
how can i top that yeah how can i top that well i did many times over a lot more rewarding being a slumlord i'll just tell you
that so um not like you were a slumlord i'm just saying you that that's not you josh but i'm saying
that you know how can you top being a millionaire by the time you're 26 it's tough you can do it
you know and the beautiful thing for you is you got a check coming in every month and so
it doesn't and they'll pay for you to study to be whatever this next thing is.
That's right.
You can go get a degree in counseling.
You can go get a degree in banking.
You can go be an engineer, architect.
All those are sit-down jobs.
And all of those in some shape, form, or fashion can become work at when you want to work or how you want to work.
And that's just four I just read off the top of my head.
You can be any number of things. Yeah. so here's what we're going to do we have a guy in
the ramsey suite named uh ken coleman that studies careers and studies people finding meaning in
their work and teaches people how to do those things he's got a couple of best sellers uh and
he's got a career assessment tool,
and I'm going to give it to you for free to say thank you for serving your country,
and I'm going to give you the book that goes with it,
and I'm also going to send you his book, From Paycheck to Purpose,
which is what we've been preaching at you for the last few minutes
because we think you're impressive.
Thank you. I really appreciate that is that cool brother
life comes very fast tell me why you're choked up
uh you mentioned finding a new purpose topping my military career
uh sometimes i struggle with a lot.
You know, you lose friends before they're even 21.
And you're like, what do I do with my life?
If I don't do something great, if I don't find happiness or purpose,
I feel like I'm just wasting it compared to my friends.
Here's what you get to do.
You get to get up and tip the barista and have a hot cup of delicious coffee and they don't get to
do that you get to go for a walk it's gonna be slow because your hips and knees but you get to
go for a walk you get to see a sunset you get to live life in the in see beauty and that's where
you start and i do think i mean i'm with you i think you i think you have an obligation you got
to live a life and a half now because those guys didn't get to. I think you're right. But it doesn't mean you have to go make a bajillion dollars or else you've wasted it.
It's not true.
Every breath you take is a breath they don't get to take.
So keep going, man.
Yeah.
The definition of success here is intentionality.
That's right.
Be intentional.
And we're going to give you some tools and help you do that.
You call us back anytime you want, son.
We love you. We appreciate you. Hold on. Christian's going to give you some tools and help you do that. You call us back anytime you want, son. We love you.
We appreciate you.
Hold on.
Christian's going to pick up and take care of you.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Thank you for joining us, America.
Selling a house the Ramsey way makes homeownership a blessing instead of a curse.
When you buy a home the wrong way, it makes you broker.
That's why they call them brokers.
So, I mean, you need to buy a house in a way that causes you to.
You've never heard that, John?
No.
That's the oldest old man joke I've heard in a long time.
That's the best dad joke ever.
I've been using that for 30 years, man.
That's why they call them
brokers that's fantastic yeah seriously i mean when you brought when broke people buy a house
it makes them broker that's what happens it's a problem we see it all the time and so getting
getting yourself straightened around and then getting with a good real estate agent that knows
what they're doing to help you find the right house and help you sell your home if you're trying to do that. And in a weird
market like this, this market's weird. Interest rates are up, people are buying houses, and prices
are going up. It's weird. And so it's not like the market went down. It didn't. We told you it
wasn't going to, by the way. So if you want to find the top agent in your area that we have vetted and that we trust
to be this, and I've had my real estate license since 1978, and I trained the team that does the
vetting here because I don't want to put my name, Ramsey Trusted, on these agents unless they
actually know what the flip they're doing. And here's an idea. If you're a real estate agent,
you ought to sell a house occasionally. Like, you know, your uncle who just got his dadgum license
and he thinks she ought to list your largest asset.
I don't think so.
I think you ought to have, like, somebody that sold, like, 60 houses
or 100 houses last year or 200 houses, knows what they're doing, right?
So Ramsey Trusted agents are high octane, high protein.
They've been vetted by us.
We trust them. That by us we trust them
that's why we send them to our friends you ramsey trusted real estate agents you can find one for
free at ramsey solutions.com slash agent there are endorsed local providers for your local
city your local neighborhood olivia is with us in houston hi olivia how are you
i'm doing good how are you guys better than we deserve what's up okay so um kind of a lot of my
going on with my situation right now but um i might possibly be uh be becoming a kidney donor
for a family member and i guess i just need to know, like, does this put me in storm mode
or how do I best prepare for this situation?
Wow.
Impressive act of generosity.
Yeah, tell us about the story.
What's going on?
So my aunt's been dealing with a kidney disease for a few years now and um one of her
kidneys is completely non-functioning anymore and the other one is about an 11 12 percent
functionality um so she's on the donor list and none of like her daughter is not a blood type
match and her husband and her sister are but because of other health conditions they're not candidates and I don't know it's just been on my heart and to try to find out are you are you a
match oh you don't even know if you're a match I'm I'm a so I just found out I am a blood match
but I still need to undergo all the other testing because it's pretty thorough testing you know they
want to make sure you don't have any other pre-existing conditions or mostly they want to make sure your
blood pressure is good and that you're not diabetic but there is like further testing
i'm just waiting on them to call me back to get that set up but i know that once i undergo that
testing things are going to move pretty fast because of the percentage that she's at so i'm
just kind of wanting to make sure i have all my dust in a row. So assuming the testing comes through, have you made the decision 100% to do this?
I have.
And, you know, I just want to be able to make sure that I can get all my questions answered with the doctors.
But I've pretty much made the decision that, yes, I want to move forward with this, you know, assuming everything is good to go.
Well, the second question then I would learn about if I'm you is what's the
downtime associated with this? And, um, okay, go ahead. I was just going to say it's a six week
recovery and I've been doing kind of my reading and my research on it so far. And this is one
of the things I'd have to ask the team, the medical team, but I know it's a six week recovery.
Um, I don't know if I need to fully take that full time off of work just because I sit down all day but you
know I also don't know how that's gonna go with my recovery so I'm I'm expecting
it to be the full six weeks first or yeah okay is your aunt and uncle in a
position to help out with some of your bills while you're while you're pulled
off I'm not sure well that would mean no well i'm not sure because
i know that for sure as far as the actual procedure goes her insurance pays for everything
i don't come we're talking about your lost income yeah do they have money to give you
so i'm i am married and my husband you know has. So I think with his income alone, we're good.
I mean, his income essentially pays for all the bills.
What is his income?
On the low end, it's like 45 right now, but it can be a little over 6,000 a month.
You've said the words, I think, I think, I think several times.
Here's what is going to be important for you.
I want you to know.
I want you and your
husband to do a budget that's realistic no i'm sorry i have it it's just it's on my phone and
no i know i know i know i just want you to be able to rest this is a big decision you're making
and it's one that's very noble and it's incredible i mean it's incredible and it's incredibly generous
but you're going into this well you kind of you know like you and your uncle and your aunt need
to sit around a table.
You all need to look each other in the eye and say,
I'm about to do this thing.
And not just have a doctor communicate between you or whatever.
Like you'll need to sit down and be adults and sit down and have this hard
conversation.
I'm about to make this sacrifice for you and I'm grateful and I want you to be
okay.
And if there's going to be a budget shortfall in your house, it's not,
it's not contingent,
but if you need that and you think they can help out and they just don't even know, then I don't have any moral problem with saying, this is going to cost us this much for me to do this and my rent is this.
See what I'm saying?
But I just want you to have those numbers.
I want you to be firm on those numbers and not think like, I think we're going to be okay. And I think they don't have it. And I think that there's a lot of, I think, so I want you to just be concrete going
into this thing. Cause there's gonna be a lot of variables regardless of what happens. And so I
want you to shore up all the variables that are just hanging out there. And the answer to your
question is yes, I would push pause on your total money makeover, baby steps and pile up cash
starting today until you know what's going to happen here. And as soon as you know, what's
going to happen, uh, if you're going to, if you are going to be a donor and you do have a six-week
downtime, then, you know, when you come back from that, you push play again. Okay. Yeah,
much because you're going into a storm, the good news is you had a good forecast, and so you can
detail out the forecast and know exactly what
the storm is going to look like or as close to exact as we can possibly do with a medical procedure
but we know okay we're going to have four weeks of uh discomfort and two weeks at work that is
uncomfortable uh of my so that's my six week recovery or it's three and three or it's six
period don't go back to work or it's i don't know
you need to get that nailed down and then you get need to get nailed down what your budget looks
like and then you pile and you stack cash because you have a very defined storm that you're walking
into of your own choosing and then when you come out the other side of it you just take that cash
and push play and start you know start back on your get out
of debt or whatever baby step your own mode get back and moving again on that and and that's
exactly how you do it so um you're you're an incredible young lady that's that's pretty cool
i've known a handful of folks that did this um uh and um i think the most unusual one I met was a pastor.
I was speaking at his church and, um, he, in his prayer time, um, had a name pop into
his head and he ended up meeting the guy and, um, donated his kidney to a perfect stranger.
Wow.
This name popped into his head and uh it was about two
years later but it was he journaled it all out he had it all written down and uh and he was uh
just nonplussed about it he was just matter of fact it's like well that's what you did
wow it was like yeah yeah it's not yeah yeah it's what i try to give james to like give us high
fives he wouldn't even give us that much less a kidney.
Not a kidney.
Yeah, this is the Ramsey.
Thanks for joining us, America.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality is my co-host.
You're welcome to drop by and visit with us in the lobby of Ramsey Solutions.
Watch the show happen.
We do it on the
glass every Monday through Friday from one to four. It's free and it's worth every dollar you pay.
So come by and hang out. And the coffee's free. The homemade cookies smells like mama's kitchen
when you're walking in here. The girls over at Baker Street Cafe do a great job and we'd love
to have you join us. In the middle of that lobby is the debt-free stage and JC is on the debt-free stage. Hi JC, how are you? Good, how are you?
Better than I deserve. Where do you live? Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Ah, very cool. And how
much debt have you paid off? $138,494. Good for you. How long did that take? Took just about four years. Good for you. And your
range of income during that time? So we started at $113,000 up to about $140,000 and then down to
$65,000. Okay, cool. And what kind of debt was the $138,000? So a few credit cards, um, a family car loan and the majority about 125,000 was
student loan debt.
Whoa.
Okay.
All right.
Cool.
Very cool.
So what happened, uh, four years plus ago that made you decide to get after it?
So we had heard, um, we had heard of Dave Ramsey several years prior and then about December of 2019
we had started attending a new church in Allentown Pennsylvania and they were offering FPU
I had mentioned it to my parents they were like we're gonna pay for that for Christmas it's your
Christmas gift all right way to go mom and dad I like you so we um we started the class in person January 2020 a few months later we didn't get to
finish in person the last few classes because of COVID yeah what church was this um faith church
in Allentown very nice good okay so you went to the class but finished uh finished online yep finished online um you know
at first my my husband was a little hesitant um to begin the class he wasn't quite sure most of
the debt was his that he brought into the marriage um and then after pretty much after the first
class he was like on board and he was telling everyone about it um uh you know we started just hustling during covid
um you know a lot of fortunately we were able to kind of make some extra money um you know with
side hustles and um just working as much as we could fortunately our jobs you know allowed us to
continue what is down the path so i am a dental clinical dental hygienist and a dental hygiene educator. So I work
at the local community college. Ah, okay. All right, cool. So that allowed you to work extra?
Yes. Yep. Yep. And neither of us, fortunately, were, you know, had a loss of income during that
time. Okay. And you just plowed right through it. Yep. Okay. So tell us the rest of the story. So.
You can do it.
So, and so I'll just, so during our journey, we were able to, my husband, he, I owe it
to him.
You know, he did most of the side hustle work really.
He built furniture out of old skis which is probably
his favorite side hustle he worked at a ski resort um on the weekends uh teaching snowboarding lessons
um you know and then that's a good side hustle yeah it was a good side hustle um and we got to lead a few FPU courses along the way.
Very cool.
And then this past January on my birthday, we were on our way home from dinner and he was in a car accident and didn't make it.
I'm sorry.
So.
How long had you all been married? Six years. Wow. What was his I'm sorry. So. How long had y'all been married?
Six years.
Wow.
What was his name?
Andrew.
Wow.
So.
So this is his debt-free spot.
Oh, it's his.
For sure.
Yeah.
He's supposed to be here.
For sure.
He is.
He's here.
Yeah.
He's here.
He's supposed to be.
It's wrong.
It's absolutely wrong.
Wow.
Wow.
So how proud do you think he is right now that you're doing this very yeah yeah it's pretty hard girl i'm surprised you did this i have to
yeah you really didn't have a choice did you yeah yeah it's a burn it was burning inside of you
yeah i understand is there a funny story he would tell about y'all's adventures
i don't know what was the biggest fight you all had about money while you were doing all
this stuff it was probably him wanting to go do something that we shouldn't.
Going out to dinner.
So he's the free spirit.
Oh, yes.
Big time.
And you were the nerd.
Yes, yes.
I mean, he was making lawn furniture out of skis.
Yeah, but they were pretty cool.
I see all the pictures of them.
They're amazing, man.
Yeah, those are neat.
Those are neat.
Adirondack shares out of old snow skis.
Incredible.
And do y'all have any little ones? We do have a little girl matilda she'll be two in july
yeah he's a pretty amazing dad oh the best yeah wow oh and here's matilda okay cool so who is this
that came with you your mom and dad or his my mom and dad okay and then the friends that went
through our fpu class no you were teaching the fpu class they went through and got debt free i met them at the break yeah yeah okay yeah wow very very cool
so after all of this tragedy and heartbreak was the whole debt-free journey worth it in the middle
of all of that oh absolutely um yeah thank god you don't have debt oh thank god thank god yeah i mean we were um so we were
really uh we were within like fifteen thousand dollars of finishing when the accident happened
thankfully um you know with following the baby steps we had our uh our defense um so um you know
we were it did bring a lot of peace um that, you know, we didn't really have
to worry about the finances.
So you had a good life insurance policy place in place.
Yeah.
Thanks to Xander.
Yeah.
Wow.
Way to go.
Yeah.
Thanks to Andrew.
Xander sold it to him.
But thanks to Andrew.
Way to go, Andrew.
And hey, I've also told widows and husbands, give your wife the gift of being able to take a few months and just be real sad.
Right.
And you're able to just look at that beautiful girl, man.
Look at that beautiful girl.
But you had the opportunity to just be sad.
Right.
And just grieve and be with your friends and family and community during that
like shape-shifting moment in your life wow what a blessing amidst an awful storm man well i'm proud
of him and i'm proud of you for having the courage to get on here and do this in his honor way to go
she's gonna watch videos of this when she's older and this is how legacies get changed she's
definitely an fpu baby yeah between teaching the class and going through
the class somewhere in there we had a baby i'm just saying okay that's funny oh very very good
well jc we're proud of you we love you thank you for having the courage to tell the story and to
honor him in the process we honor him as well. And fabulously, fabulously done.
Well done.
Big shout out to Andrew.
Amen.
The legacy he left.
All right.
It's JC and Andrew from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
$138,000 paid off in four years, making $113,000 to $140,000 to $65,000.
Count it down.
Let's hear a debt-free scream.
Three, two, one.
We're debt-free!
Yeah!
Wow!
Wow.
I'm not crying.
You're crying.
Nope, I'm not crying.
You're crying.
I think my allergy's just acted up. Nope. I'm not crying. You're crying. I think my allergies just acted up.
Oh, my gosh.
Wow.
That's powerful.
That's courage and bravery right there, Dave.
Well, it is.
And it just illustrates that we don't know what we don't know.
And so stuff as ridiculous as life insurance is hard subject to talk about.
Stuff as ridiculous as having a will.
Stuff as ridiculous as getting out of debt to set your family on a solid foundation.
Because you just don't freaking know.
And when people, Dave, come after us about,
why would I pay off my mortgage when the interest rate is so low?
I don't want to pay off my student loans.
I want to put it in the market and do this.
Right there.
This is why.
Right there. Right here. Right there. This is why. Right there.
Right here.
Right there.
That little, beautiful baby girl.
And we're looking at a mom and a wife that gets to breathe amidst all that pain
because they decided as a couple several years ago, no more.
Yeah.
It's powerful.
Good for you, Jason.
Way to go, JC.
You're a hero.
Absolute hero, Andrew.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Our scripture of the day, Proverbs 14, 23. In all toil there is profit, but mere talk tends only to poverty.
Nelson Mandela said, money won't create success. The freedom to make it will.
Ooh, yes, that would be true.
That would be true.
Natalie is with us, and Natalie is in Columbus, Ohio.
Hi, Natalie.
Welcome to The Ramsey Show.
Hi, Dave.
Hi, John.
Thank you so much for taking my call.
Sure.
What's up?
I am a 21-year-old nurse. I am a Ramsey follower on Baby Step 2.
I've paid off $90,000 in student loans. I have $10,000 left. I'm looking advice on my situation.
I'm dating somebody with a large net worth. He had a large net worth when we began dating,
but his dad passed in June of 2023 and inherited a large estate.
We are talking about our future plans, and I'm so incredibly grateful to be in this situation.
It's his parents' legacy, but I'm feeling a large amount of guilt for the amount of money that we have access to at our age
and the budget that we are talking about for our home and land.
I also feel that I'm not contributing anything to the situation, so just looking for some
advice.
Well, you're not contributing money on a percentage basis to the situation.
That's a fact.
But you are contributing to the situation.
You're 50% of the relationship.
Yes. contributing to the situation you're 50 of the relationship so there's a you know if you only measure the quality of a relationship based on the financial contribution then we don't have a real relationship so this is the financial is just part of the
contribution my wife has not had a work has not worked outside the home in 38 years.
Do you think she hasn't contributed?
Do you think she feels guilty?
No.
It would be the answer to both, by the way.
Not even close.
She reminds me when she contributes.
Natalie, this story has plagued you your whole life.
Who told you you're not enough?
No one.
I think that I just didn't grow up with a lot of money,
and I just kind of pictured my whole life blue collar.
That's right.
And I've been through this incredible situation.
The money freaks you out.
The money freaks you out.
Because when you were growing up, money was for other people, not for you.
Right?
Yes.
And it scares you to death.
So here's the thing, okay?
The word guilty is a dangerous word in this, okay?
I feel guilty.
You should feel guilty when you have money only if you stole it.
If you earned it, you should not feel guilty.
If your boyfriend's mom and dad did a great job
and left it to their son who they loved dearly,
he should not feel guilt.
He didn't do anything wrong.
And you should not feel guilt for marrying a man
whose mom and dad left him a bunch of money
and also who had a net worth before that. what is the total dollars we're talking about here um so after taxes
and splitting it 50 50 with his brother um it's going to be about 4.5 million and then how much
did he have already he when we began dating it was between 1 million and 2 he makes 135 a year
and i make 70 okay and so he's
gonna be he's gonna be about 7 million when y'all get married how old is he um he is 32 and i'm 29
okay all right excellent okay i don't know how i don't know how to tell you to be okay with this
because it it you know first thing you do is you say uh when my daughters were uh teenagers they
had this silly thing they said awkward, like a turtle on its back.
It's awkward.
Can't roll over.
Can't move.
It's just flailing about.
You know what I'm saying?
And so if they were having an awkward conversation, they would just say, awkward turtle.
They would just say out loud, this is awkward.
And first thing we can do is just say out loud, this is awkward.
It's normal for you to feel some
weirdness because this is weird it's not a normal path agreed
agreed so if we just say out loud this is weird i don't i've never done this before
i've never dated a guy with seven million dollars before i never dreamed i would date a guy in all
of my thinking about dating people i never came up with a dating scenario in my mind that was seven million dollars and here I am so this is awkward and weird even
better when you got your job making 70 you thought you were rich didn't you totally yes you'd won
you'd won I was I was yeah and he makes twice that so he's twice rich and your boyfriend was
like hold my beer here's seven million dollars right okay what kind of house are you going to build um we're thinking about one to one point
three that's perfectly reasonable out of seven easy easy uh thirty thousand on a wedding
perfectly reasonable out of seven million just pay cash for the wedding and be um be smart about
is there any uh crazy in his family or crazy in your family
that's rolling their eyes at you two um they know about our situation not about specific numbers no
i said crazy i would say i who is there crazy people in one of your family that are going to
roll their eyes at this whole thing possibly yes yeah okay and that's running through your head too
yeah i don't want them to um yeah in hillbilly land where i grew up in their face yeah i grew
i don't care you didn't rub anything in their face they can choose to pick it up and rub it
on their own face but you're not i can tell on the phone that you're a kind generous person
you're a nurse for a living you serve others for a living you're not going to
rub this in anybody's face but but jealous people and envy people in the noble hillbilly culture i
grew up in they would say things like you're getting above your raisin and i'm like a raisin
you're forgetting your roots hey you're raising what's a raising got to do with this oh my raisin
oh my raising oh now I got it.
Okay.
But yeah, it's that same kind of stuff, right?
It's envy and jealousy and that kind of stuff.
And it floats around in most families, certainly in most communities.
And so, you know, you feel that.
And so the tough thing is that you're not going to have some money problems that other people have, but you're going to have to have you're not going to have some money problems that
other people have but you're going to have some different problems yes and i think that's part
of it i feel like the weight of the responsibility good that's wisdom but also natalie you've
tell me i'm wrong you've been it's been your job to make sure everybody was okay your whole life yes and with my job okay and now
you're just got seven million you're going to be living a 1.2 million dollar house you're going to
be married and the day you get married you're going to be a multi-millionaire and it's not your
job to manage how other people in your family choose to use that and weaponize it against you
because you can't it's not a thing you can even control. You got to let it go. What you can do is to continue to
be a person of character like you already are and you and your husband go build and make an
amazing life and be able to be this generous to your kids and grandkids when the time comes.
Do good.
Yeah.
Just do good.
But stop managing the other adults in your life. You can't.
Be good and do good. Absolutely. Be good Just do good. But stop managing the other adults in your life. You can't. Be good and do good.
Absolutely.
Be good and do good.
May I ask a follow-up question to this?
Quick.
Quick.
I actually.
Quick.
Yeah, go for it.
Hello?
I told him to hold off from an engagement until I pay off my debt.
Do you think that that's reasonable?
No.
No, it's ridiculous.
No, it has nothing to do with the conversation.
You're trying to earn your way into this.
Stop earning your way into this.
Perfect.
I'm not a contributor.
Yes, you are.
Yes, you are.
He loves you.
You're freaking Natalie.
That says contributor right there.
Okay.
You're not going to make $7 million between now and the wedding.
This ain't't gonna even up
in fact i want for the spiritual exercise i want you to not do that because i want you to feel that
discomfort he's marrying you despite your financial the terrible financial situation
you awful person you yeah he lifted you up oh my gosh come on 10 grand you've paid a million dollars you're amazing you're amazing thank you yeah he picked you for a reason okay
yes yeah because there's no reason i know there's not but there's nothing in here that's gold
digging this is the opposite end of gold digging on the spectrum you don't even know what that is probably but yeah the a lady who is trying to
marry someone for their money is a gold digger okay you're the opposite end of this it's like
you're almost not doing this because of the money yeah you're generous you're kind and continue to
love well listen it's you and him. Look at each other.
And anybody that doesn't like it, oh well.
Next.
There you go.
Trolls live under bridges.
Keep that in mind.
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. Hey guys, I'm Rachel.
And I'm George.
And you've probably heard our voices before on The Ramsey Show.
And do we have a surprise for you. Yep, we have our very own show,
Smart Money Happy Hour,
where we talk about pop culture,
current events, and of course, money.
George, it's a great show.
And what else do we talk about?
So much, Rachel.
Not enough, and yet too much.
We talk about guilt tipping
because tipping is out of control
and I won't stand for it anymore,
which is why I'm sitting.
I'm glad you're taking such a stand.
And we also talk about something else I'm passionate about, Disney adults. Oh, sitting. I'm glad you're taking such a stand. And we also talk about
something else I'm passionate about, Disney adults. Why is it a thing? Listen, some adults
still find the magic. Sure. We also talk about toxic money traits and girl math. And if you
don't know what those are, you have to listen to the podcast. Yeah, there's a lot there,
you guys. It's pretty fun. We keep you relevant is what I'm trying to say. We help you out.
So pull up a chair to the happy hour you wish your friends were having.
We promise you won't regret it.
And if you don't have friends, we'll be your friends.
We will.
We're great friends.
So make sure to check it out on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or the Ramsey Network app.