The Ramsey Show - Don’t Go Broke Trying to Keep the Peace

Episode Date: July 4, 2025

Rachel Cruze & Jade Warshaw answer your questions and discuss: My husband is very controlling with the budget. We owe more than $85K in credit card debt. I hate living in California a...nd my job sucks Should guests pay for meals at our wedding? I owe $2.5M on rental properties Should I use a debt consolidation company? Next Steps: ✅ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Help us make the show better by taking this short survey!⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 weekdays from 2–5 p.m. ET or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠send us an email.⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠  📈 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a Free Personalized Plan⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ✔️ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Help us make the show better. Please take this short survey⁠⁠⁠ 📱 ⁠⁠⁠Download the free Ramsey Network app! ⁠⁠⁠ 🏠 ⁠⁠⁠Get organized and prepared to buy or sell a home. 📙 Tired of debt? Grab Breaking Free From Broke now! 📖 Your Total Money Makeover starts here. Connect with our Sponsors: Stop paying more and start shopping smarter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ALDI⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Get 10% off your first month of⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ BetterHelp⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Go to ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Boost Mobile⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ to switch today! Learn more about⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Christian Healthcare Ministries⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Get started today with⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Churchill Mortgage⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Get 20% off when you join ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠DeleteMe⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Go to⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ FAIRWINDS Credit Union⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ for an exclusive account bundle! Save 15% on your first ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Field of Greens⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ order with code RAMSEY Find top Health Insurance Plans at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Health Trust Financial⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Use code RAMSEY to save 20% at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Mama Bear Legal Forms⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Visit⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ NetSuite⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ today to learn more Use promo code RAMSEY for 18% off at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠The Nokbox For more information, go to SimpliSafe Get started with ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YRefy⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ or call 844-2-RAMSEY Visit⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Zander Insurance⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ for your free instant quote today!  Explore more from Ramsey Network: 💸 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠The Ramsey Show Highlights⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 🧠 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠The Dr. John Delony Show⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 🍸 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Smart Money Happy Hour⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 💡 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠The Rachel Cruze Show⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 💰 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠George Kamel⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 🪑 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Front Row Seat with Ken Coleman⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 📈 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠EntreLeadership⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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 amazing relationships. I am Rachel Cruz hosting this hour with my good friend and bestselling author, Jade Warshaw. And we are here to answer your questions about life, money, career, anything and everything. So give us a call at 888-825-5225. Up first this hour, we have Chris in Raleigh, North Carolina. Hey Chris, welcome to the show. Thank you. Thank you for taking my call.
Starting point is 00:00:48 Absolutely. How can we help? So I'm asking this question for my daughter and her fiance. Um, and I wanted you guys to give your best explanation of why you should not buy a house together before you are married. Oh, I like that. So, I mean, the first thing is there's no legal protections. I mean, you're kind of just his word against her word and you're co mingling
Starting point is 00:01:10 money together. And so at the end of the day, if it doesn't work out, there's not really a process in place to decide who gets what. That would be my first thought. Okay. So with you saying that, of course nobody goes into a marriage thinking that it's not going to work out. These two are no different. But they both still live at home. They both have a job. She's in college and she's finishing up a teaching degree, which she's going to take
Starting point is 00:01:39 her three years to do that. And they're scheduled to get married in April of 26. They're trying to understand how you you wait until you're married to buy a house because they say well where are we gonna live at? Well that's a good question and I tell me you got to look at Reni and if they decide to wait I mean I want you to explain to them why that's a good thing, I guess, is what I'm saying. To wait to get married or to wait to not buy the house together?
Starting point is 00:02:09 Wait to not buy the house together. I think they understand the finance part of it, but I think they're like, if we don't have it when we get married, we don't have nowhere to go. So that's what I'm kind of getting at, wanting them to understand and hear it from somebody else. Well, there's two conversations, I think. There's the value side of it, and then there's the money side of it.
Starting point is 00:02:28 So on the money side, yeah, we don't recommend combining money until you're married. So up until this point, they should be viewing her money as her money, his money as his money. So her money is used to buy her rent, her food, pay her bills, that sort of thing, and vice versa for him. The moment that they start combining it, it just becomes kind of a web together,
Starting point is 00:02:48 which when you're married, it's a good web, but when you're not married, it's a bad web because if something happens and they end up not staying together, then that's a lot that has the ability to be lost. Right, would you agree? Yes, I would agree 100%. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:03:03 Yeah, and then- I just want to end it. Well, I'm sorry. yeah, no, it's fine And when you own something with someone and this is even a car Chris We would say this about a car when both of your names are on the ownership of something to detangle that is Very difficult to do and when you have an asset like a house It's it's very difficult and then I would say to them well, financially speaking, they're just gonna be out of school. They can't afford a house anyways. The upkeep of home ownership already
Starting point is 00:03:31 is gonna add stress to their life and they don't need that, right? That's down the road and we want that to be part of their plan long term, but it almost kind of steals a level of joy and freedom. When you can just rent and everything's taken care of for you, enjoy your early 20s. Don't, you know, if you're in a place financially
Starting point is 00:03:48 that you're settling down and you can buy a home and can afford it, that's one thing. But when you're first starting out, like understand that, you know, it's very, very expensive. So on that end, Chris, it's very unwise, very unwise to put your name together
Starting point is 00:04:02 when you are not married on an asset because just like Jade just said, untangling that, it's a mess. It's an absolute mess. And then a house is magnified in that. That is not a wise move. And then you have the values conversation. And again, people can do what they wanna do
Starting point is 00:04:18 and believe what they wanna believe. But I think there is something to be said about acting like you're married and pretending like you're married when you're not. You're not married. And there is a level of something sacred to say, hey, I'm going to join my life with this person under a vow and under a covenant. And we are going to then merge our lives together and actually do this life together.
Starting point is 00:04:41 And there's something that nowadays it's it's just like you know you get it all the way right up front and it's like man there's just something about saying we're going to do this in a order that again some would say is old-fashioned but I think is wise because it actually gives you options and too Chris I've talked to so many people that you know they live together and worse they have a house together and they're not like oh I don't even know if I want to marry this person. And the creating this timeline of the breaking up lasts so much longer versus like,
Starting point is 00:05:11 hey, we're just trying to figure this out and it's not working. And it's so much easier to cut ties with people if it gets to that point. What I think is going on here is there's a lack of foresight, obviously, because they're thinking under best case scenario. And that already is a red flag to me
Starting point is 00:05:28 because the truth is life happens. You don't know what life's gonna happen. So having the right protections in place is important. The other thing is I think that this is more out of convenience than anything else. I think they're trying to create a certain level of convenience instead of living their lives as they are. How old did you say they are?
Starting point is 00:05:43 They're 20 now. Okay, they're 20 now. So yeah, I feel like they're going, it's just easier to do it like this as opposed to taking the smarter route and the more independent route. Does that make sense? I mean, I know this is not for you, it's for them, but... Absolutely. That's why I call it. Because what you said is right on the money and I can't wait for them to hear this Well, let us know how they take it. I hope they they'll take it from two ladies who yeah for sure Yeah, and and and it's a hard thing to Chris, you know, I mean granted she's 20. So I do feel like her You you being able to speak into her life is you door's starting to close with her becoming an adult, but it's still open, hopefully.
Starting point is 00:06:28 But also knowing that as your kids get older, and especially when they start entering adulthood, the conversation does look different. The tone you take, the perspective you take, and I would just say to you, Chris, that as much as you can, the biggest way to influence, I would think her as a 20 year old who's in college, knows what she wants to do for a career,
Starting point is 00:06:50 she's obviously very smart and she knows a path that she's walking down, but to engage this conversation, as much of an a friend aspect than like, I'm a dad, I'm gonna tell you what to do. I just feel like you start to get to that age in late teens early 20s where it's like the persuasiveness of a parent seems to play much stronger than I got to control you like when you have like a three-year-old and you're like this is what you're gonna do but some of it still gets in like truthfully I remember when I was
Starting point is 00:07:20 in my 20s I was dating this guy And I remember my dad telling me, he was like, Jade, like before you go too deep into this, just know like your tastes change. Like what you want changes over time. And I think he told me something like, what you want is gonna change like five or six times. So, and I mean, it was weird because he was like, you know, you were dating this guy and you thought, and then you were dating this guy.
Starting point is 00:07:41 He's like, this guy's like number four. Like you might change your mind again. And as at the time I was kind of like this guy doesn't know what he's talking about but he was right. Yeah. And so there's part of it I'm like you're 20 years old. Don't get me wrong some people they marry their high school sweetheart whatever I'm not saying against that but there is a part of it that that is such a growth period for
Starting point is 00:08:01 most of us. Oh yeah. You change so much from 20 to 25 even. Right, right. And so there's part of that where it's like you guys, you don't know what's gonna happen in the future. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And you certainly don't wanna be like locked
Starting point is 00:08:13 into a financial asset like a house. Yeah, yeah. That might make you feel trapped. Yes, let the timeline unfold naturally, right? And let the turn of events that, you know, the order of events play out in a natural way versus trying to force it and rearrange everything because it's just gonna make it more difficult. Hope that helps, Chris. Thanks for the call. This is The Ramsey Show. Hey, George Camel here.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Listen, we need to talk specifically about Mama Bear Legal Forms. Allow me to paint you a picture. You plan a vacation, you make a budget, you book the Airbnb, you build a spreadsheet of activities because you're that person, you fire up the maps app and boom, trip of a lifetime. So here's the question. If you plan that carefully for a one week getaway, why are you just winging it when it comes to your will not having a will in place is like dropping your
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Starting point is 00:10:06 That's mamabarelegalforms.com, promo code RAMSY. So one thing that is approaching quickly, Jade, is the Live Like No One Else cruise. We have 85% of the cabins booked and you guys don't want to miss it. We're going to Turks and Caicos. We're going to St. Thomas, Puerto Rico, the Bahamas. It's just going to be, it's going to be amazing. I mean, yep. And your tickets of course include with a cruise ship, all your food is included, even room service.
Starting point is 00:10:53 There's lounges by all the pools and the hot tubs. And we're all going to be there, all the Ramsey personalities and a whole lineup of other guests. So it's going to be a really, really fun week you all you all and again this is for those of you on Baby Steps 4 and beyond and we want to celebrate you because we talk about living like no one else so later you can live and you can give like no one else and this is part of enjoying the money and where you are financially and you're gonna do it with us and we
Starting point is 00:11:19 can't wait so it is March 22nd through the 29th and it's coming up fast so you do not want to miss this incredible vacation you go to RamseySolutions.com Cruise or you can click the link in the description if you are watching on YouTube or listening on podcast Love it up next we have Shannon in Pensacola, Florida. Hey Shannon. Welcome to the show We're doing well. Thanks for calling. How can we help? Welcome to the show. How are y'all? We are doing well. Thanks for calling.
Starting point is 00:11:44 How can we help? Well, I just have a random question because I've been getting a try on a home here in Pensacola. That's my only dad. And I have a current interest rate at 7.49. And I've been getting, you know, I just feel like there's just so much fraud going on and I don't know how y'all feel about that. What kind of fraud? What do you mean? Well
Starting point is 00:12:10 I just mean like on so many different levels. So I had a kid called me today who said oh well we can give you you have an FHA loan so we can give you, you have an FHA loan, so we can give you a five point, I don't know what he said, four two and oh no money down. I go wait a minute, I'm a business development person. So I'm like, well what's in it for you guys? So he wanted you to refinance and he's gonna get the fees associated with that. He wanted me to refinance, but I'm like wait a minute, how does this work out? Cause I keep in touch with my current mortgage broker that I use to buy the home. I keep in touch with her and I say, Hey, what are they at? Cause I got a letter from FHA who said, Hey, we can go down to 5.25 to 5.2%.
Starting point is 00:13:08 And I just wanted to know y'all thoughts on that. And I just feel like I'm like, okay. I mean, you're right. You're going to start to wait. And I know this election, there's just so much. All right. All right. Do it again.
Starting point is 00:13:24 Let's roll it on home. All right. Here's the thing. Yeah. Yes. I think that we are starting to be at a turning point when we're going to see, I mean, we already have seen mortgage interest rates go down. And I think they're going down again this month. That's what the Fed is saying. They should. Yeah. And we might even see it before they release, you know, their, um, report or in their, uh, report of the interest rates, whatever. But my point is you get to decide, right?
Starting point is 00:13:51 If you don't wanna refinance, you don't have to refinance. And if there's an offer. You want my mortgage to go down, y'all. Okay, well, if there's an offer that presents itself to you and you're interested in it, I just, you started out the conversation start talking about scams. And then we kind of went to the election.
Starting point is 00:14:10 Then we kind of went to interest rates and I want to kind of clear it out. Being able to refinance your house at a lower interest rates, not a scam unless you do your due diligence and find, okay, this is not reasonable. Yeah, unless you use a scammer for it. Yeah. Some random guy that calls you.
Starting point is 00:14:25 I probably wouldn't use him. Well, I just think the guy that called me, I'm just making a point, is that he's like, oh it doesn't cost you anything and I'm like, hmm, wait a minute. That's kind of where I'm coming down. So yeah, they're probably, to your point, anything that comes up that is that is exciting right now, we find this always in the financial industry there's always going to be people prying on that right so whether it's mortgage you know mortgage rates are dropping so people are going to clamor to refinance and there may be scammers out of that crypto became a big thing scammers flock to that they will flock to try to get people's money so
Starting point is 00:14:58 that's where your discernment shannon comes in that if you choose and probably will and anyone listening refinancing you know if you choose and probably will and anyone listening Refinancing, you know if you're gonna be in the house long term, it's a it's a great option Yeah And so maybe you wait another six months to see you continue after the election to see if it keeps dropping and then maybe Shannon you decide to do that then I would use a reputable Broker whether you have one Churchill mortgage is one that we recommend here at Ramsey She's from Oklahoma and I just trust her. Yeah, that's recommend here at Ramsey. I'm from Oklahoma, she's from Oklahoma, and I'm instructor. Yeah, that's great. That's great. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So doing it reputably.
Starting point is 00:15:31 So yeah, I think for sure that it would be, I think it's a great option. And people will be doing that more and more. And I think you had great advice there, Rachel. If you're looking at rates and you're seeing them go down, I wouldn't like jump to refinance instantly. I'd like let it happen, let them roll back because they're probably not gonna jump right back up. Right, we have finally gotten to the point
Starting point is 00:15:52 where it's like, okay, inflation is at this point, unemployment's at this point, it has to happen. So I'm with you, I'd probably wait until after the election, let the chips fall where they do, and then you can make the wisest decision. For sure. All right, up next we got Mike in Dayton, Ohio. Hi, Mike. Welcome to the show. Hello. How are you? We're doing great. How can we help?
Starting point is 00:16:13 Okay. I'm 42 years old and I made some bad financial decisions of my life regarding 401k and stuff like that. Got divorced. Ex-wife took half the 401k and I've touched it a few times. I'm basically starting over at 42. I have like 21,000 in my 401k now and I'm only putting in like 6% because we're on baby step number two and I was going to see is it too late? No.
Starting point is 00:16:42 Not at all. Not at all. Not by a long shot. No. And if anything, this will probably scare you more, Mike. I would advise you to even pause that 6% while you're getting out of debt. Because here's the deal. When you free up so much of your payments, you're able to throw then 15% of your income at retirement and be able to catch up. So how much debt do you guys have? The house, we got like 83,000 on and the truck we're trying to get paid off.
Starting point is 00:17:12 We should have paid off by the end of this year. How much is it? I got like 10, almost 11,000 left in it. Okay. And we're- You keep saying we, who's we? I know you were divorced. Me and my wife. Yeah. I thought you were, okay.
Starting point is 00:17:28 So you got divorced, you remarried. Yeah. My ex-wife took half of 401k. I got remarried. Okay. Perfect. Perfect. So 11,000 on the truck. A lot better. Yeah. That's great. Okay. So 11,000 on the truck.
Starting point is 00:17:42 What else do you guys have? Just the mortgage. Okay. So the 11,000, okay. Yeah. Okay, so 11,000 on the truck. What else do you guys have? Just the mortgage. Okay, so the 11,000, okay. Yeah, so the mortgage goes obviously in baby step six. So we're not worried about that right now. So yeah, I would get this 11,000. How much do you guys make combined income? I make 37.84 an hour and she makes about 30.
Starting point is 00:18:02 Okay. What's that amount to every month? Do I know? What's that amount to every month? Do I know? What's that amount to every month? What do you see monthly on your budget? Oh, around five, six thousand a month. Okay. Just for me. Just for you? Yes. And then what does she bring in a month? It's close's close to $5,000. Okay. Okay. So you guys are making $120,000 a year? Fair?
Starting point is 00:18:29 Yeah, close to. Okay. Before tax. Yeah, I would pause that 6%, Mike, honestly, until this truck's paid off and then you guys get a fully funded emergency fund and then press play. And then you got 15%. Jade's got her fancy calculator out. So we're going to be, are you able to?
Starting point is 00:18:44 Yeah, I got it in there. So you were worried earlier, you're like, I'm 42, I've made these mistakes. And here's the thing, this is just the picture you painted today. Let's pretend you clear out this car, you clear out this step pretty quickly. And you said you make around 120,000 a year.
Starting point is 00:18:59 If you're putting around 15% into investments, that's about $1,500 a month. Let's say you do that from the time you're 42 to the time you're 65. And I'm just using the Ramsey Solutions investment calculator. You already had 21,000 in there, which is great. So if every month you contribute 1,500
Starting point is 00:19:15 at a 10% rate of return, which is average, contrary to popular belief, I mean, that's almost $2 million. It's $1.8 million. And that's a big deal. That's plenty. And that's on the current income you have, Mike. That's right.
Starting point is 00:19:30 That's not you getting raises and your wife changing jobs. I mean, it will continue. Usually for most people, their income continues to go up in their lifetime. So $2 million, Mike, you're on track. Don't you worry. That ain't bad. But hey, it's a good little, like, we talk about how fear can be a gift.
Starting point is 00:19:46 There's a great book called Fear is a Gift, and there is a gift of fear. And there is a beauty in it, because it kind of does shake you up a little bit. Oh my gosh, am I late? And then you're able to say, okay, what changes do we need to make for this not to be a reality?
Starting point is 00:19:59 So you're doing great, Mike. I appreciate you calling, and good luck to you and your wife, because yeah, you guys are on track. This is The Ramsey Show. I get it. Switching banks is a pain in the you-know-what, but if your bank doesn't line up with your money goals, it's time to make the switch to Fairwinds Credit Union. Listen, you guys know how I feel about big banks.
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Starting point is 00:22:16 Up next we have Sarah in Atlanta. Hey Sarah, welcome to the show. Hi, how are you? Thank you for taking my call. Absolutely. How can we help? I pretty much don't even know where to really start. So I've been married for less than three years. And I've worked for everything that I have
Starting point is 00:22:41 and nothing was given to me. And when I got married I was my net worth was a little over a million and but that did consist of most money in retirement and equity and a few rental properties. My fiance at the time, now husband, uh, did not have as much as I did, which was fine. Um, and, uh, so we had decided to get a pre-nup and whatever, uh, he came in with, I matched. And then anything else in excess of that was to go to our children. What he come in with? Um, he came in with 160,000.
Starting point is 00:23:28 So you were at a million net worth and he was at 160 net worth? Yeah. Whose idea was So, fast forward, fast forward, I'm making a great income, he's making a great income. I've always been a saver, just naturally, very, always, you know, lived below my means. And things just begun, like just not making any sense. And my husband owns his own business and I just started seeing our accounts getting lower and lower and lower when I believe our account should have been getting higher and higher. So I said, Hey, you know, like what's going on? And his response was, Oh, you know, I just haven't done the paperwork, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:23 for taxes and said that he filed the tax extension. So it's taking money out of his savings until he goes through his paperwork so he can know what he has to pay exactly. I said, okay. Several months went by and I still notice these things going down and things just don't make sense to me. Something in particular happened and I said, I pretty much said, are you sure everything's okay? He said, yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:51 I asked them to please let me see his account, his business account where he said all the money was. And that's when he admitted to me that he has, uh, when he admitted to me that he has been stealing from his words, from us, from me, and is a fraud. And needless to say, dove into everything and he has completely wiped us out. Oh my gosh. into everything and he has completely wiped us out. Our savings, everything. We now only have two months of emergency fund. We have two very small children, two under two. When you say he wiped out your savings, how much did you have saved? And he was just funneling
Starting point is 00:25:44 it to keep his business afloat? Is that what you're saying? So we had, we had over a hundred thousand dollars in savings. He also took from me personally, two hundred and eighty six thousand dollars. Out of where? Just various accounts that I had that were deemed as pre-marital that weren't supposed to be touched. And what did he use that money for? So I just went through everything and there is no addictions, there's no other woman. There's nothing like that. So then when I dove into things, so it turns out that he actually, the lies began when
Starting point is 00:26:31 we were dating and he actually lied on his print up and the hundred and sixty thousand that he even came in with were tied to loans and lines of credit from his business. So he just said that this is how much credit I have. It's not real, it's not real net worth. I didn't know that. But that's what he just admitted to you though recently. So yeah. So really he came in with zero.
Starting point is 00:26:59 And he lied on a- He actually came in with negative. So he lied on a legal document too. Yeah. Yeah. When did lied on a legal document too. Yeah. Yeah. When did all this happen, Sarah? How long ago?
Starting point is 00:27:10 About two months ago. Okay. And I have to say, I'm still in shock. Sure. Sure. How's the business doing? Is it going into the business and his business is tanking or does he, when you look at his business, is there profit?
Starting point is 00:27:26 And he's just not bringing that back into the personal side. His no, no, his business is not doing anywhere near as well as it used to or as it was. And he has been lying about how well it's doing. And you know, you know, and just, you know, like I'm, I'm a budgeter, you know, like you tell me, Hey, you know, only this much money is coming in. I'll just, you know, pull out a spreadsheet and say, Hey, let's start budgeting. But that's not what happened. And said, you know, we're going on vacation. Yeah. And said, we're, you know, doing things like that, that we shouldn't be doing if you have debt.
Starting point is 00:28:07 So he's also racked up about $130,000 now in personal debt. Can I ask you a question? Because he's not here, so I can't question him in the same way. What was the inside of you that made you go, I need to sign a prenup with this guy. Was there a red flag already? No, it was, no, there wasn't. It was just the fact that our, that our, uh, net worth was so vast. So different.
Starting point is 00:28:37 Yeah. Different. Yeah. Yeah. Sarah, I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry. So are you separating from him? Um, no, I No. I feel we have two very small children.
Starting point is 00:28:51 Any guy, I'm still very much in shock, but we have two very small children and I know the statistics with growing home, going in a home, you know, growing up in a home with a broken household. And I don't want that for my children either. Yeah. Are you in counseling? They're just so young. Are you guys in counseling?
Starting point is 00:29:10 Will he go? No. He said he would go, but to be quite frank, it's not something that we could afford right now. Well, if you're going to make this, the marriage part work, Sarah, You're married to a liar. And not just a liar like here and there. Like, I mean, this is like a, this is, yeah, this is like,
Starting point is 00:29:31 there's something, there's something wrong, deeply, deeply, deeply wrong with him. And in the process, he's hurting his family. And so for you to draw boundaries for yourself does not make you a bad mom. I just wanna give you freedom to do what's best for Sarah in this moment. And for this to be a healthy longevity level of a marriage,
Starting point is 00:29:57 there is a lot of broken, broken, broken pieces. And without a professional, I really believe, to be in the mix of this, and for him to show deep remorse and a pattern of change until you have trust, I'm separating everything today, Sarah, financially. You need to protect yourself. Your income now goes into a different account
Starting point is 00:30:22 with his name nowhere near it. I would contact a lawyer just on the basis of lying about a prenup. I would just get some more information to protect yourself and your kids because I have already done most of that and I'm in the midst of a post-up, which he has agreed to where you go back in and have like basically a prenup in the middle of the marriage, is that what that is? Changing the prenup to make it correct so where you guys currently are?
Starting point is 00:30:52 No, no, no, just reiterating that like his debt is his debt. And even if I decided to let's say help him get out of his debt, that I would not be you know I'm expecting to get reimbursed at some point it's not just yeah my responsibility. I hear you yeah well what we find so much often Sarah with these I mean that this I mean the level of financial infidelity that you've experienced is the level of an affair I mean you know you can you can put anything in place but that you start to question yourself I mean there's so much
Starting point is 00:31:24 in that when you are so deeply lied to from the person that you're supposed to be in a marriage with. So I would do what I could. I would have my own therapist. I would have him go to therapy if you're gonna make this work, but I would also protect yourself
Starting point is 00:31:38 until a pattern is proven, that he's proven back his trust with finances. But for now, I would keep it separate and you have your stuff. Statistics show that half of Americans don't have enough life insurance, or they don't have any at all. I don't understand this, John. Why don't people want to take care of their family? They think they're gonna die or something? Well, I used to be one of those guys, I didn't even think about it, and one of my buddies
Starting point is 00:32:12 said, hey, the only reason to not have life insurance is if you hate your wife and kids. And I immediately went and got term life insurance. That's a gut punch. And, oh, you're telling me, and for decades, Dave, I've sat across people who've lost a spouse, they've lost somebody important to them, and for decades, Dave, I've sat across people who've lost a spouse, they've lost somebody important to them. Me too. And they don't know what to do next.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Me too. It's terrifying. I mean, you're gonna have a crisis here, and you got two options while you're sitting and talking to a young widow. She's concerned about how she's gonna invest all this money properly and not mess this up, or she's concerned how she's gonna eat tomorrow.
Starting point is 00:32:41 That's exactly right. These are the two options. And take care of your dad gum family, man. Term life insurance can replace income, pay off debts, cover funeral expenses, so your family can actually have the opportunity to just be sad. Yeah. To just miss you. That's exactly what it's supposed to be.
Starting point is 00:32:56 It's saying I love you to your family. Term life insurance. Jeff Zander and the team at Zander Insurance makes it easy and affordable. I've used them personally for 25 years. They're the only people I trust. Go to Zander.com or call, thank you for listening to the show. This show is bringing hope to so many people, changing millions of lives. I'm one of those lives and so I just have a special appreciation. And by the way, if you want to show your appreciation, something that you can do that's so easy,
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Starting point is 00:34:13 that we know is within this content that we share day in and day out. So thank you for listening, thank you for liking, thank you for subscribing, and thank you, thank you for sharing this show. We really, really appreciate it. It helps us oh so much. So keep doing that.
Starting point is 00:34:29 And in the meantime, we're going to go to the phones. We got Brenda. She's in Jackson, Mississippi. What's going on, Brenda? Hello. Hi, Jayden Rachel. Thank you for taking my call. You bet.
Starting point is 00:34:41 Me and my husband are having a little bit of a disagreement about a job that's coming up. Um, me and my husband are in baby step three. Um, so saving up for that three to six month emergency fund. Um, my, uh, my husband and I just run a little side gig of handyman service. We have not been formally trained or anything, but we work on our own house. And, um, so do it for friends and family that need help. Um, the job that's coming up this weekend is for a missionary friend of ours.
Starting point is 00:35:15 Um, the wife doesn't work and the husband works too small part-time jobs. And, um, they had a leak in their bathroom and they knew about it but didn't deal with it for a couple of years. So now the damage is pretty extensive. So my husband wants to charge them about $10 an hour for us to do the work. They will cover the materials in addition. And then, but I want to charge our standard service, which is about $50 an hour. Oh, okay. He says that they're poor. And so we shouldn't charge them. And they have told us that they don't really have the money to do it, but it's getting
Starting point is 00:36:07 to the point where their shower is about to fall through the floor. Did they come to you because they figured you would give them a discount? Like, have they given any indication that it's like, oh, they'll probably give us a discount? Not necessarily, but they know that we're going to be cheaper than a regular contractor that's going to come out and do it. I mean, Brenda, how long would the project take? How long would the project take?
Starting point is 00:36:34 Two to four days, depending on how extensive it is once we get into it. If it's worse than we think it is. And if you did it, that would be the only thing you could work on for the two to four days? Yes. But it's time that my husband has off anyway. we think it is. And if you did it, that would be the only thing you could work on for the two to four days? Yes, but it's time that my husband has off anyway. So it's not like we're taking off additional work. Yeah, I mean, if you feel like you're being taken advantage
Starting point is 00:36:56 of, that's one thing for sure. That doesn't feel good ever to anyone. But we also, when we talk about giving, there's giving in money, there's giving in time, there's giving in talents. And maybe it's a thing your husband's like, yeah, I just feel called to help this family. And they're in a really rough situation. They don't have the money to fix something like their water.
Starting point is 00:37:14 Like I mean, it's kind of a need. It's a necessity. And I mean, if he wants to do it, and again, I think it's a one off if it becomes a pattern where he constantly is using his time and keeps losing money, continually, maybe like a red flag, but for two days, if it's something that he wants to do, I mean, I get you guys are on Baby Step 3, I understand it. And again, if you're being taken advantage of,
Starting point is 00:37:37 like that feels gross, right? Like there's a level there where you're like, oh, I don't know if that feels right. But I feel like if he wants to do it out of just who he is and he can, and y'all aren't paying, it's no out of pocket for y'all, it's really just time at that point.
Starting point is 00:37:55 I don't know, I could see it, but I'm more of like the emotional side person when it comes to that stuff. We're like, yeah, absolutely, we can do it. But I don't want it to be detrimental to you guys. But I don't think 20, I don't think two days is detrimental. I mean, I'll tell you what my husband and I do because I'm always the one that's like,
Starting point is 00:38:14 let's give this much. And he's like, cool out, like let's pull back. Like, let me look at the numbers. And so what we always do is we agree to pray about it. Like you go over there and pray about it. I'll go over here and pray about it. And then when we come together, it's like one, two, three, say it. And still, I'm always the one that's trying to do the most and he's come up a little bit,
Starting point is 00:38:35 you know? And so then from there, we just kind of meet in the middle. So maybe it's, you know, you want to charge the whole $50 an hour. He was doing 10. Maybe it's like, hey, maybe getting off this call, you're like, fine, I'll just do what he was doing 10. Maybe it's like hey Maybe getting off this call you're like fine I'll just do what he wants to do But if you're not like go pray about it give yourselves 24 hours or whatever time you have and then meet in the middle like you'll either come out on the same card or it's something
Starting point is 00:38:55 That you have to meet in the middle and maybe it's like okay We're not gonna charge 50, but we're gonna charge 25 and we're gonna give them half rate whatever it is Um, yeah Or maybe it's a time thing too that if you guys get into it and it's gonna take a day beyond that, that you guys may say, hey, there's a point that we're not gonna be able to continue this because of XYZ
Starting point is 00:39:14 and letting them know that upfront. Have you guys asked their budget at all? We know they've heard about the Ramsey plan and they agree with it, but we also know that they don't have the money. Yeah, but did they say that to you guys? Like we don't have money to fix this? Well, not necessarily, but they told us that they might put, like we said we would need money up front to pay for the materials. And they said, well well if we don't get paid this week like
Starting point is 00:39:45 if our check isn't big enough we'll just put it on a credit card and that's when my husband was like no. Well you know we don't really have to pay that much. So again I think. My point is you know we didn't put him in this position they knew about this leak for years and they did nothing about it. Sure. Could have been a cheaper fix. So.
Starting point is 00:40:05 Yeah. Yeah. So yeah, and again, I think if there are people in your lives that you continue to enable and continue to give and give and give and give and give, and they don't, I mean, like there's a level that you could start to be taken advantage of for sure. But if you haven't had history of that,
Starting point is 00:40:21 or history going forward, and he just feels this like tug on his heart of like, I just feel like I want to do this, not because I have to or because I feel bad. You know what I mean? There's not great motivations always. It needs to be something that he's like, listen, I see this family, I know I can do this.
Starting point is 00:40:39 I'm gonna give them two days. I'm gonna give them a significant discount. They need the help and I feel called to do that. That may be what he wants to do. You know what I mean? But I do think yes I hear you Brenda that it doesn't feel right. There's not a level of justice there. She's not working She could go and get a job and bring in money. Like I hear all of that. Totally What's the real numbers here? Because you gave us by hour like what how much money is this equating to? so if it was my
Starting point is 00:41:07 See, it would be a thousand to fifteen hundred dollars not including materials and we don't up charge on the materials at all And if it was my husband's it would just be $200 flat and who covers the materials they do They still cover the materials. Yes And who covers the materials they do? They still cover the materials, yes. So it's about $300 in materials and then an additional $200 for labor, so $500 total. Okay. So we're talking about the difference between like $200 or $1800? No, $1500 or $500.
Starting point is 00:41:45 Okay. So it's a thousand. The material was $300 and it'd be the same either way. So it's a thousand dollar difference. You know, I wouldn't tell you what to do. I mean, I can sit here and be like, listen, if you guys have the money, do it. But at the same time, you and your husband have to be on the same page. And that's something that Rachel and I can't do for you.
Starting point is 00:42:09 So listen, take my advice, go home and give yourself a quick little bit of time and be like, we're going to pray about it. We're going to take you get 24 hours. I get 24 hours. We're going to reconvene. And no matter where we hit, we're going to meet in the middle. And then there is some bit of give and some bit of take because I would be feeling some type of way
Starting point is 00:42:26 if I was like, this is my vacation time. Like we were supposed to go away with the family and do something fun because then it's not only the time but it's the value of the time too. So there are. Yeah, if he's having to take PTO and all, yes. I think that there's, yes, wise ways to go about it.
Starting point is 00:42:41 But if you're self-employed, he's doing his own thing and he has two days that he has to go and help. I don't know. I think service is a great way to give. Yes, and it hurts sometimes more than money. Time is so valuable. It's so valuable. Oh, yeah. Oh, that's a conundrum. But you know, I always like to lean a little bit on the side of generosity. I mean, you have to do what you can afford and what makes sense for your family. But yes, generosity is very, very important. That does it for this hour of the Ramsey Show. Thanks for hanging out with us.
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Starting point is 00:44:55 Warshaw, and we are here to answer your questions. So give us a call at triple 8, 825-5225. We'll be answering your questions about life, about money, relationships, career, anything or everything. We are here for you America. All right. Up next we have Josh in Sacramento, California. Hey Josh, welcome to the show. Oh, thanks for having me. Taking for my calls. Absolutely. Kind of straight to the point. Straight to the point.
Starting point is 00:45:21 I live in the people's Republic of California. I'm trying to leave this state. Uh, what I have a problem with is it's kind of financial and life career as well. So right now I'm a federal government employee. I am seven years out from retirement or when I'm eligible. My wife is a nurse. She makes really good money in California and they make her anywhere from $90 an hour. My goal is to run Solomay my house transferred to a different position and to a different state, uh, within the same agency, uh, just because I have a very toxic work environment going on right now and I just, I need to get out. Um, but the problem is, is if my wife leaves the state of California, she'd go
Starting point is 00:45:57 from $90 an hour to $30 an hour, which is a huge financial, huge financial cut. Um, she'd also probably lose her 401k as well as that. We did talk about doing foster to adopt in the event that we did move, but my question to you, I guess, is, am I just being, cutting my nose off to spite my face and just try to deal with it, knowing the fact that I have seven years left to retirement,
Starting point is 00:46:21 my house will be paid off in four years. You sound like you're at the end of your rope. You sound really frustrated. I am, I'm very frustrated. Yes, I'm very frustrated. I've wanted to transfer and get out of this state for 17 years of my career. Does your wife want to leave as well?
Starting point is 00:46:38 Besides the money, I know she'll take a pay cut, but just in general? Her family's here, but she realizes how frustrated I am. And like I said, my boss is just totally horrible right now. And it's been going on for a long time. Oh yeah, yes it has. So my question to you is, my being emotionally stupid
Starting point is 00:46:58 by wanting to leave just so I can quote unquote have a more happy life to trade one stress for another for financial stress. Well is it California? Okay, so if you work for the state, if you... It's California, the state sucks, the high taxes, just getting out of everything. All right. Okay, you are, yeah, you're at your wits end. You're done, you're done. Okay, so if you were to leave, what would you do and where would you go?
Starting point is 00:47:29 I'd basically stay with the same federal agency. I would go from what I'm doing now to basically, to just a different function of job function, but just for the same pay. Is there a different? I would get it a little bit. I'm glad. It would be a lower cost of living,
Starting point is 00:47:43 which would be 13 grand a year. Where? But I'd imagine that, so I'd be from California, possibly to Georgia. Okay. But I'm wondering if based on the income tax rate out of, well that's where the position is at for my agency. Have you ever been to Georgia? Okay.
Starting point is 00:47:57 Have you ever been? Yes, I have. Okay. What's your wife think about Georgia? The sections of it she hates. Okay. Because here's the thing, Josh. I mean, I can hear you're frustrated and I mean,
Starting point is 00:48:08 I could only imagine. I mean, I understand it is from like just the state perspective that you're frustrated with. And then on top of that, you have a terrible job. You go and work somewhere for 40, 50 hours a week in a miserable place. So yeah, you're not in a good, this isn't like a good head space for Josh.
Starting point is 00:48:23 So my question is, you're not in a good, this isn't like a good head space for Josh. So my question is, you're not the only one in this equation, right? So your wife is gonna have as much of an input in this decision too, because I think that there has to be this, you know, I don't know, but if she is not on board, resentment later on in life, moving away from family, going to a place she hates, she's gonna end up being you in four years, possibly.
Starting point is 00:48:52 I don't know, but that's a warning sign. It's just like, you guys need to be so tight-knit on this decision, because it's a big deal to move across the country. So you guys need to lock arms and be, we are in this together. The good, the and like be, like we are in this together. The good, the bad, the ugly, we are in this together. Cause I don't want your marriage to be destroyed
Starting point is 00:49:10 in the process either, right? And I want to be able to give her a voice too and her frustrations may not be as deep as yours. And I don't want her, and honestly Josh, the motivation for her, I'm like, there's a part of me that I'm like, I would hate for her to do it just to make you happy cause Josh is frustrated. So we gotta go do what Josh wants to do, right? So like there needs to be a part of me that I'm like, I would hate for her to do it just to make you happy because Josh is frustrated.
Starting point is 00:49:25 So we gotta go do what Josh wants to do, right? So like there needs to be a level of agreement upon you guys. And I thought plan B too, which I know you hate California, but is there a different position you could take where you guys live, a different job, a different opportunity, at least to get out of the toxicness of that job and then just have the frustrations with the taxes in California. I don't know
Starting point is 00:49:48 But if you and your wife agree to move to Georgia then make the move You're not no leaving a job seven years away from retirement is not stupid because the work is You're in a terrible situation. So no that is not stupid to leave that no I listen I I am of the mind that if one spouse is completely unhappy, then nobody's happy. That's true. So I do think that probably a move is good, but if she has come out and said,
Starting point is 00:50:16 I don't really like Georgia, then Georgia's gotta be off the table. You've gotta pick a place where both of you are like, yeah, I'm up for that adventure And I mean there's 50 I don't want to say 50 states. What is it now? No, it's 15 But don't the other territories count? Okay. So there's 50 states and then some territories depending on what history book you look in Okay, and so there's a lot of options here is what i'm saying
Starting point is 00:50:40 Um going back to the conversation about the 401k quickly. what made you say that she'd lose her 401k? So, so, well, I wouldn't say she'd lose her 401k. What she did is she would stop contributing to a 401k. So she would be able to take it out. Yeah, you just transfer it. You just transfer it. Right. Okay. I just want to be clear about that. Yeah. So I guess the issue with me is, you know, I've only got seven years left and I mortgage will be done in four years on my house. My wife is like going from $90 an hour to basically 30 if she decides to
Starting point is 00:51:07 work. If not, then it's like it's a huge. Let me ask you, let me ask you this. Is there any world where you're like, I, is there any world where you're willing to ride this out longer because you're the person who brought up in just seven years, I'll retire and in just four years, I'll have my car paid off. House. I'm sorry, my house paid off.
Starting point is 00:51:27 So do you really care about those things? Or do you know what I'm saying? Are those things that you're weighing in or are you beyond that? So here's the problem. Emotionally and mentally I am just, I am checked out. The problem is I don't want to live life on the emotional aspect. I know logically, financially it life on the emotional aspect. I know logically Financially it makes more sense to stay. However, I don't know if I can emotionally and mentally know
Starting point is 00:51:52 Yeah, mentally and emotionally is gonna be because you could be debt-free and still be miserable Yeah, I'm job like and you're not saying this is after six months. You've said for seven years for years. You've been saying this is after six months. You've said for years, for years you've been upset. Yeah, I thought about most of my career probably about 10, the last 10 years of my career. So it's safe to say that you have sacrificed a certain level. Why have you stayed in it, Josh? I'm curious. What was that? Why have you stayed in it for 10 years? The pension and early retirement.
Starting point is 00:52:21 Okay, so this is a good lesson for America, that money does not equate to happiness. There is a level of your life that as adults, we have to decide to bring a level of peace and just into work a crappy, I would say a different word, but we're on a family friendly show, crappy, crappy situation just to make a paycheck. You guys, it's not worth it. It's not worth it.
Starting point is 00:52:43 Like life is too short. Life is too short, Josh. So you and your wife, I would sit down, you guys, yeah, pick a paycheck. You guys, it's not worth it. It's not worth it. Like life is too short. Life is too short, Josh. So you and your wife, I would sit down. You guys, yeah, pick a place on the map and say we're gonna transfer. That's not Georgia. And we may even be in different careers, but we're gonna find the level of peace and enjoyment
Starting point is 00:52:55 and we may make less, but people that make less and live within their means and work somewhere, they're happy. So yeah, you gotta, yeah, Josh, y'all gotta make some changes for sure. And you should have made them eight years ago, if I'm being honest, not to shame you, but we need to make some decisions here, Josh. We're rooting for you. Come to Nashville. This is the Ramsey Show. Hey, this is Dr. John Delaney for Churchill Mortgage. Good friends, I have bought multiple homes with Churchill Mortgage because they always
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Starting point is 00:55:17 hurt just the same. WhyRefi refinances defaulted private student loans and builds a custom loan based on your ability to pay. So stop feeling the pain of defaulted private student loan debt and go to yrefi.com slash ramsey. That's the letter yrefy.com slash ramsey. May not be available in all states. All right. Today's question comes from Justin in, California He says I've been working hard to save money for house my wife And I have no debt and have a six-month emergency fund so far. I've saved 175,000 for our down payment we have a combined income of a hundred and forty thousand We live in California and are looking at houses in the six hundred fifty thousand dollar range
Starting point is 00:56:02 I want to save more so that we can put more down on the house. My wife has been asking me to buy her a diamond ring that costs about $3,500. I am holding off on buying the ring because we can use that money to pay for closing costs. Should I buy a diamond ring for her or wait until we buy the house? This is wild. Um, I'm assuming that the diamond ring is not like an, like a wedding ring or like I'm assuming it's just a gift that she wants. Right. Um, yeah, I think based on what you've laid out here, I would have loved to hear her side of it,
Starting point is 00:56:40 but based off of what you've laid out here, it sounds like you have decided that the priority is the house. And at the end of the day, you both need to sit down and re talk and say, okay, what's more important, us trying to get into this house? Because if I buy this ring, this is how much it sets us back. So yeah, and I would want to know the timeframe on how much like how, how many months or how many, you know what I mean? Like just to know, like what is this setting you back and is that, are you okay with that, both of you? Yeah, and I do think it's okay,
Starting point is 00:57:10 and Rachel, you can drop in here. I think it's okay, like as a couple, when you set a focus and you're going towards that thing, and as the time passes, other things crop up and you're like, oh, that could be cool, or that could be fun. Yes. And I do think it's important to have those conversations
Starting point is 00:57:26 and decide, are we realigning back on what the goal was, or are we gonna divert here for a moment? Because at the end of the day, it is your life, and you get to decide, how urgently are we moving? And I don't know if this diamond ring was something you've been promising her, maybe you guys got engaged and you never got her a ring, I don't know any of that, but have the conversation conversation but it sounds like the house is what's most important.
Starting point is 00:57:49 And I would say you know the down payment you guys are you know above that 25% so I'm like you're in a good a good spot for the down payments you know like it's a I don't know you you have a lot there percentage wise for what the house is worth. So how much would 3000 really set you back? But also I'd wanna know from her, what's this about? And I do, don't get me wrong, I love jewelry, I love shopping, all of it.
Starting point is 00:58:15 But also you're like, okay, what is that gonna get me in the near term, right? Maybe he got her just like a band when they got married and always promised her like an actual like diamond ring. I don't know what the story is. So yeah. If there's something there, but I would wanna see timeframe
Starting point is 00:58:35 how long this would set you back to the goal that you wanna have for your down payment on the house. That's what I'd be curious about. Hope that helps Justin. All right, up next we have Haley in Omaha. Hey Haley, welcome to the show. Hi, thank you for having me today. It's such an honor to be on the show. Absolutely. Thanks for calling. How can we help? So my parents took out a universal life policy on me when I was born,
Starting point is 00:59:01 me and my sister both. And now that I've turned 21, I have the option to continue paying those payments for the universal life policy or cashing it out at the cash value and giving that back to my parents and just moving on for the future. Oh, you have to give it back to them when you cash it out? Yes.
Starting point is 00:59:23 Is that what they said? Yeah. Okay. How much cash it out? Yes. Is that what they said? Yeah. Okay. How much will it be? It's just $750 for the cash value. Okay. I'm just curious because you said you have the option to keep paying on it or cash it out.
Starting point is 00:59:39 Yeah. So that's interesting to me that you would keep paying on it. And then, but if you were to cash it out, you have to give the money back to them. This is very odd. Either way, I would cash it out and get out of that. Yeah. How old are you? Haley?
Starting point is 00:59:54 Did you say I'm 21? 21. Okay. So the difference between what they have a universal life policy is similar to like, it's like basically a whole life policy. And you're paying probably four times the amount than what you would pay for just a standard term policy. Cause what you have, this universal life, what they basically pair is this like investment
Starting point is 01:00:16 savings account with life insurance. And what ends up happening when you pair and marry those two products, you kind of get crappy on both, especially the savings side. So the rate of return usually within these policies is like, it's terrible. You could do better in a high yield savings account,
Starting point is 01:00:33 much less like actually investing your money with the 10, 12% return that the market brings. So the savings investment portion sucks on these and that's the selling point. So always remember this, Haley, going forward into adulthood, that you wanna keep your insurance and your investing completely separate.
Starting point is 01:00:53 Never combine them. Because when you combine them, you're not getting the best of both worlds. You're paying more for a policy and you're getting a crappy investment with it. So like it's a horrible product. And a lot of parents, yeah, you took it out when you were born.
Starting point is 01:01:07 I mean, that's the Gerber life insurance. I mean, like all these companies go and they do this, you know, these policies for babies and why you need life insurance too, Haley, is if someone had depended upon your income. So if I were you, Haley, I would cancel it, say goodbye to the $700, give it back to your parents, and live your life. Don't be paying monthly on this.
Starting point is 01:01:28 And then when you need life insurance, AKA when, usually when you become a parent, or even if you get married, you know, and someone is dependent upon your income to live the lifestyle that you guys are living, then I want you to go. You did mention that I could have this policy if I were to like pass away and then someone
Starting point is 01:01:46 were to have to pay for my funeral costs. So that's why this policy is around like $25,000. Sure. Okay. Well, I think you would recommend having savings for or a policy for the purpose of insurance is for people who are dependent on your income. Typically when you have life insurances in place, it's because, like for instance,
Starting point is 01:02:06 I have life insurance in place because my family depends on my income. My husband has life insurance in place because we depend on his income. We have children and so if one of us, God forbid, if something were to happen, the family will feel that. And so we say, let's have this policy in place
Starting point is 01:02:21 so that if the worst happens, everybody who depends on this income will be set, not just enough to pay for funeral and burial costs, but they won't have to worry about money. That's the blessing that can come out of a really tough situation. So in this case, your parents having a policy on you was completely, truly unnecessary.
Starting point is 01:02:40 Yeah, and the funeral cost, you know, idea, funerals, they are getting more expensive, but at 21 years old, I would not have the burden of feeling like I need to have savings for my funeral, right? So like that, I would not add that into the conversation. Some people may be like, that's irresponsible, but as a 21 year old, your parents will take care of it if something were to happen to you, Haley. So yeah, I would not be paying monthly into something just for that.
Starting point is 01:03:02 And that is a selling point, they say too, right? Like to cover the funeral and all of that. So again, Haley, when you get in a position in life though that you need life insurance, remember term life is gonna be your best friend. And the earlier you get it, the younger you are, the healthier you are, it is so inexpensive.
Starting point is 01:03:21 Even for me, I'm in my late 30s and it's still inexpensive at this point. I mean, like it is a fraction of what you pay with whole life. And the coverage you get for that is so much better. Yes, and for term life, it is for a term of your life. Whole life is for your entire life. Term is for 20 or 30 or whatever policy you buy. But as you're
Starting point is 01:03:46 doing the Ramsey Baby Steps and you're walking through getting out of debt, you have an emergency fund in place, you're funding retirement, eventually your house is paid off. Baby Steps Millionaires are doing all of this on average in about 9 to 12 years doing everything. And at that point, you're self- when you, if something were to happen to you and there's no house payment, there's no debt and you have, I don't know, 300 grand and a 401k or whatever it is, like, you know, everyone's fine. So you won't need life insurance for your entire life
Starting point is 01:04:15 if you're doing the Ramsey way when it comes to your money, which is what we recommend. I feel like- It's a great call, Hailey, great question. Whole life, universal life, it's like the spork. It's a spork. It is, it is. It's not really a fork. It's not really a spoon Yeah And if you go to Xander sucks in Xander insurance calm you guys check out Xander because you're able to get a quote so quickly
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Starting point is 01:06:00 than a million dollars in annual revenue, download NetSuite's free ebook, Navigating Global Trade, Three Insights for Leaders, at netsuite.com slash Ramsey. That's netsuite.com the Ramsey Show. We have Katie on the line from Dallas from the last segment and Katie was telling us she has $47,000 saved $24,000 in debt, which was car and credit cards. And she was wondering initially when she called in about how to invest and how to pay off debt, not just let that money sit there because she wants to make progress. And as we kind of were digging into the numbers in her situation, kind of unpacking to the numbers in her situation kind of unpacking the relational side of money and marriage and money is so closely related.
Starting point is 01:07:09 When you are married, working together with your spouse and being on the same team is a crucial part, but also we know on the other end, it's one of the leading causes of fights and tension and divorce and conflict. When you're not on the same page and when you live kind of separate lives financially. As we were unpacking with Katie a little bit, that's what we've kind of started to discover is where they are from a relational standpoint when it comes to their money. Katie, is that a good overview? Would you change any of that or add anything?
Starting point is 01:07:35 Oh gosh, that was unexpected. Yes, you've definitely unpacked it. We unpacked it. Yeah, so before we were getting off the call, we just kind of asked and I feel like it kind of struck some emotion in you of knowing that you guys don't work together, but yet he has a lot of debt and you said it was just too much debt for you to even want to handle or to face. Is that right?
Starting point is 01:07:59 Yeah. My parents, they got divorced because of money. So that's a big fear. So that's kind of the background. My husband, he has let a few credit cards go to collections recently, as soon as my daughter was born. He's been underwater for what feels like a long time, probably two years already. And if I mentioned this, you're going to say, sell it. Tell us the truck. It's the truck.
Starting point is 01:08:36 He has 11,000 left on it, but it's these monthly payments of $600 that he wants to be free from. Okay. Okay. What other debt does he have? What's the credit cards and collections? What are those amount to? Do you know? I want to say roughly it's $7,000. Okay.
Starting point is 01:08:59 Anything else? No, you've opened my eyes. No, not that I know of. Maybe I need to have a discussion with him. I think so because don't get me wrong. Now you've opened my eyes. No, not that I know of. Maybe I need to have a discussion with him. I think so because don't get me wrong. I hate debt and I don't like any amount or form of debt. But I was again expecting for you to say like he's got $200,000.
Starting point is 01:09:19 I was expecting something way more astronomical. And when you told us, hey, yeah, he's got $18,000 of debt, I kind of just was like, oh, okay, cool. Like we can pay that off. And he's working, right? Yes, he is. Okay, let me dig deeper. I just came in.
Starting point is 01:09:36 So he has, we have this watercraft boat. It is under both of our names, but he takes financial responsibility for it. And the balance is 11,000. Okay, so there's another 11K. What else? Anything else? Aside from his truck, the car and a few credit cards,
Starting point is 01:09:57 there is nothing else. So a truck and a car? Sorry, the truck and the boat. Okay, truck and the boat, so we're 28,000. How much is the boat worth? Do you know? No idea. Okay. Okay. We haven't looked into it. It's very precious. Okay. And does he have any money saved in his name? No. No. Okay. So, okay, so Katie, I think what this starts to open up and what you're feeling, and correct me if I'm wrong, but it is touching every security, insecurity part of your story and in your life.
Starting point is 01:10:40 Like you've done everything you can to stock money away, even taking out credit cards and spending over here. But just knowing the safety of money has been a lifeline for you and probably coming out of a lot of pain from your parents' experience. And you've done everything to safeguard yourself, right? Against, I would say against debt. But what's funny is you've taken on some debt, right? So there is still a level of risk there, but you've padded yourself with the savings and it's kind of become your lifeline and you're gripping onto that and letting go of that is one of the scariest things for you to do. Would that be correct?
Starting point is 01:11:15 Yes. Yeah. Which is very understandable, Katie, very understandable. And so I want you to, as much as you can, because with money, emotions drive so much of this. And the more logical we can get, the safer I think you're gonna feel with some of these decisions.
Starting point is 01:11:32 And one of the first steps I would do is sit down with him because I don't know his, I'm not on the phone with him and I can't ask him these questions. I don't know where he's at. If he is at a place, Katie, that he's like, I'm so overwhelmed. I'm so mad at myself, right? He's probably not feeling great about himself. And it's like, I want to change. I want to turn this around. That's one scenario. A scenario I would have a red flag and cause you to pump the brakes a little bit on all of this. If he's like, I don't care. I don't care, Katie. I'm going to do
Starting point is 01:12:01 what I want. And we get those calls too with some guys that are like, well, he wants to buy the truck. He doesn't care. He's gonna buy it and we're you know, we can't make the payment But he doesn't care right so like that is a character issue if it's that would you say it's kind of the first scenario Or the second I'm pretty sure he will call the show tomorrow Yeah, but so he's more of on the first and on that first, you know scenario you would say he's all for it. Okay. Okay. So Katie, okay.
Starting point is 01:12:31 I just I want to encourage you that you're this is all good, right? Like I know you feel overwhelmed and we're going to walk you through a very clear plan right now. So the first thing I want you to do is you guys together tonight, you can open a bottle of wine if you need like a good sip or something. Order a pizza. Whatever you gotta do. To relax and say, okay, together we're gonna look at everything.
Starting point is 01:12:55 We're getting out our pay stubs. We're gonna know exactly, because when I asked you how much money you guys make a year, you said, I think around six, like I want you to know to the dollar. Here's what we make combined. Here's every debt. We're going to write it out and we're going to know everything here. And we're going to tonight shake hands and say, we are now a team together.
Starting point is 01:13:15 No longer are we roommates, venmoing each other for the mortgage. No, screw all of that. No, we are one. Our income, when our income hits our new checking account that we're gonna open on Monday morning When our income hits that account together, we are working as a team because when you do that Katie not only from an emotional perspective Does it create so much unity and so much of a more beautiful marriage?
Starting point is 01:13:39 Because you see yourselves as one which is what you do when you choose to get married to live life with another person You're you're living that out on a tactical sense with your money. So that's such a beautiful part of it. And then together tactically, as you start to trust each other in this, you're going to have this cleaned up, Katie. I would sell the boat immediately. But then by Monday, you guys can take this $47,000, and this is going to scare you. But I would pay off all of that.
Starting point is 01:14:03 I would keep $1,000 you would have you have I think 42,000 if you don't count the boats, I want that sold that right you're gonna pay off everything else Okay, and so you're gonna have five thousand dollars left and you guys together are gonna have a goal. I would say to save up Probably I don't know twenty six twenty seven thousand for an emergency fund Mm-hmm, and you're gonna that's your next goal together Katie is to work to to000 for an emergency fund. And that's your next goal together, Katie, is to work to buff up that emergency fund, okay? And that's gonna take you guys, maybe the next eight, nine months,
Starting point is 01:14:33 10 months to do all of that for that emergency fund. But together, that's gonna be your goal for 2025. Together doing this. Getting rid of the payments, we're done with payments, and now you're gonna have your full income to be putting towards this emergency fund. What say you? What'd you say?
Starting point is 01:14:56 Yeah. I would have 5,000 left. So I'm paying off my two credit cards. Yes. I'm paying off my car. Yes. S'm paying off my car. Yes. Selling the boat. And you suggested paying off the truck?
Starting point is 01:15:11 Yes. Oh gosh. That's scary. Is it scary because of what's gonna be left? The 5,000 or it's scary that you're paying off his debt? That's scary. You know what might make it less scary if I were you? I'd calculate up all the monthly payments.
Starting point is 01:15:29 I'd calculate what you're paying in car payments, what you're paying in credit card payments, what he's paying in credit card payments, what he's paying in boat payments and what you're paying in truck payments. Add up all that money and when you see that, that you're gonna have that back every single month, I think that's gonna make you feel less scared. Cause that's a lot, that you're going to have that back every single month, I think that's going to make you feel less scared because that's a lot.
Starting point is 01:15:48 That's a hefty chunk. You have a lot of your income, Katie, leaving and a lot of it's going to be coming back to you and you'll be able to build this emergency fund up back very, very quickly. And then beyond that, you can start investing. Hold on, stay on the line, Katie. And Emily's going to pick up and we're going to put you guys through Financial Peace University. It's our nine lesson course and give you every dollar premium.
Starting point is 01:16:06 So when you guys start looking at numbers today, you can start building out your first budgets. Thanks for the call, Katie. We're cheering you guys on. So just imagine you look up a year from now and everything that you wanted to accomplish, you accomplish because when you want to do something, it doesn't just happen by chance. You have to be motivated. You have to have a plan to really get there and be organized. That's why we are so excited about the new 2025 Ramsey Goal Planner.
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Starting point is 01:17:46 So go to ramsysolutions.com slash store or click the link in the description if you're watching on YouTube or listening on podcast. Up next, we have Vanessa in Seattle. Hey Vanessa, welcome to the show. Hey, thank you for taking my call. Absolutely. Okay, so I'm just going to dive right in.
Starting point is 01:18:05 So I'm a 54 year old woman. I live in the Seattle area. I am not working right now. I'm at the tail end of a bankruptcy. I was married and I got, I, there was just too much debt. I couldn't, there was no way that I could get out of that. So I did file bankruptcy at just discharged. And so there's that having,
Starting point is 01:18:28 you know, just starting over with credit. I, I am not going to have a place to live as of December, the end of December, the owners of the home that I've been living in have decided to sell. It's, it's been an absolute shock because my ex-husband completely remodeled the inside and I thought for sure you know I'd have some time here. Oh wow. Gosh you've had a lot Vanessa. I have a lot going on in my yes. Yes I'm so sorry. Divorce and the bankruptcy and a living situation that's up in the air. And you said your ex-husband remodeled the inside of the rental house? He did. Of a rental. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:06 When y'all were living there together? We were for four months and then he moved out. It was an abusive marriage. So it took me a long time to get out of that, but I did. I'm so proud of you. Yeah. It's extremely brave. Yeah, thank you.
Starting point is 01:19:19 I appreciate that. So I was making anywhere between 15 and 18,000 with an eBay business while I was married. He was the primary, you know, he had the job, he was bringing in very good money. But we were renting in the previous house we were at for nine years. So this is my third marriage. I just want to say that if I knew that I I was gonna be here I would already have a house But it just didn't work out that way. So Okay, so what?
Starting point is 01:19:54 What are you doing right now Vanessa for how are you paying your rent right now? How are you paying for expenses? Well, I was living off my savings and then on top of everything I lost my daughter. It was very sudden. She died. She was 26. I'm sorry. I know there's so much going on. So that just killed me. I mean, it's so hard, so horrible. You know, there's nothing like losing a child. It's horrible. Oh, I can't even imagine. So it's been hard, you know, to work, um, to concentrate on eBay, to do anything really. I
Starting point is 01:20:32 mean, it's just completely, that was debilitated and just from everything. So did you get anything out of the, out of the divorce? I did. And I've been living on that for the last three years. Let's see. So I was receiving maintenance and then I had about 50,000 saved. So what's that down to now? It's down to zero. However, there is some good news. I just inherited $30,000. Okay. So I need to know what to do with my $30,000. I don't have any debt other than the car payment. I have a car payment that's $300 a month. And how much do you owe on the car? What's the total amount you owe on the car? I owe about $18,000 on that. Okay. So 18 to 20. It's,
Starting point is 01:21:18 it might be about 20 with the payoff. Fine. Okay. So, but if I take that, yeah, let me. Let us give you some help here. Real quick, will you just give me a quick timeline? These are big things that have happened. Will you just kind of walk me through really quickly when the divorce happened, the loss of your daughter and the bankruptcy? When did all this play out? Okay.
Starting point is 01:21:39 So, the bankruptcy was, it just discharged. That was 90 days. It's been about four months total with that. Losing my daughter happened, it was last January, so it's been a year and a half. And my divorce, we separated after we moved into this home, which was November of 2021. So he moved out in April of 2022. So since then I have been living off of what I have, what I got, what I received from that.
Starting point is 01:22:11 That's good, I just wanna know, cause I mean these are like three very traumatic things that have occurred so I just didn't know timeline wise. Because I think for you Vanessa, I mean you're the biggest glaring lights that I see is is the income side of not because as you experience with the 50,000 if you continue to live on savings and you're not you know replacing that with other income it eventually dwindles and that's what you've experienced and so making sure that this $30,000 does not dwindle.
Starting point is 01:22:45 And the only way to really do that is to be able to be bringing in some income, which I know is. Sorry. No, you're good. Go ahead. Okay. So I, I've been working on my master's degree. I was busy with that in art history. Now what I'm going to do with that, I have no idea. I mean in art history. Now what I'm gonna do with that, I have no idea. I mean, people ask me what are you gonna, art history, yeah, because I love, I just love it.
Starting point is 01:23:10 I love architecture, art. What did you plan to do with it when you got it? Yeah, that and how are you paying for it? I don't know, maybe teach. I was paying for my education as I went. So I still have some, I have some loans, I think. I'm not sure exactly. Yeah, I have student, I wasn't able to,
Starting point is 01:23:34 you can't file on those. So I'm not able to. Okay, so let's get, we gotta get organized and we gotta get a game plan going forward. Right now is not the time to keep taking those classes because you can't afford to pay for them. And you still have some existing student loan debt, it sounds like you've got the 18,000 for this car.
Starting point is 01:23:51 What I believe your homework should be, and I think Rachel would probably agree, is first things first is you gotta get a job. Yeah, and this is, you know, this is target, Vanessa. I mean, this is make an 18 an hour at Walmart. I mean, this is really doing what you can because the decisions so far are not panning out in reality for you Right and art history degree. Well, I'm gonna go get a master's but I don't know what I want to do with it right, so I want to make sure the ROI on your time is realistic and
Starting point is 01:24:19 And so being able just to get something in I think it'll be good for you, Vanessa I think there's gonna be a level of dignity and confidence of you going and earning your own money. That's gonna be huge. So for the time being, I mean, it would be tomorrow, I would be out and just retail, whatever you can, just to be getting an income in. And then eventually figuring out what does Vanessa wanna do
Starting point is 01:24:40 and what can Vanessa do to support herself and be able to you know advance throughout life you know you're you're in your 50s and there's you know there's still a great great life to live and I want you to be able to do that but the steps would be number one finding a job tomorrow any job and I would be I would be working like crazy I think my goal would be not to touch the 30,000 that would be the goal and I think selling the car is probably in the cars big because you don't need an $18,000 car Vanessa you need a $30,000. That would be the goal. And I think selling the car is probably good. Selling the car is big.
Starting point is 01:25:05 Because you don't need an $18,000 car of Vanessa. You need a $6,000 car. And then third, I'd say you know that the time is coming where you won't be living in this house anymore. So let's start doing research on a place that we can live that's less expensive, possibly. Right? So that you can.
Starting point is 01:25:21 Studio apartment, maybe just tiny. I mean, anything, again, it's going to be uncomfortable for a little bit But I think making some of these wiser more conservative decisions is gonna give you some bandwidth and some margin. You need it Yes The car might be a little bit tricky and the reason is because I kept that through the bankruptcy and then just Negotiated the interest rate. So if I let that go, then it's going to hit my credit, which I want squeaky clean from here forward. Possibly. Yeah. I, I probably
Starting point is 01:25:54 could sell it at, cause yeah, that's what we're talking about. We're talking about you, you looking on Kelly blue book to start and seeing what it's worth and then you selling it and buying something cheaper in cash, not a payment. Yep, that's right. Okay, Vanessa, that's a lot. Why don't you hang on the line, Christian will pick up and we'll get you with a Ramsey coach to help you.
Starting point is 01:26:12 Well, if you're listening on radio, keep on listening, but if you are on YouTube or podcast, make sure to go download the Ramsey Show app to get the third hour there. Thanks to everyone in the booth. Thank you, Jade Warshaw, and we will see you soon, America. Buying and selling a home is a big deal and you want an expert in your corner fighting for you to get the right deal at the right price. That's why we only recommend Ramsey Trusted real estate agents. They're
Starting point is 01:27:05 hand-picked pros who know their stuff, listen to your needs, and have your back from the first call all the way to closing day. To find a Ramsey Trusted agent near you, visit RamseySolutions.com slash agent. RamseySolutions.com slash agent. brought to you by the every dollar app start budgeting for free today the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions it's the Ramsey show where we help people build wealth do work that they love and create amazing relationships I'm Rachel Cruz hosting this hour with my friend and bestselling author, Jade Warshaw. And we are here to help you out America. You can give us a call at 888-825-5225.
Starting point is 01:27:57 And we'll answer your questions about money, about life, relationships, career. Give us a call. Up first, we have John in Houston. Hey John, welcome to the show. Hello, welcome. Thanks for having me, I guess. Absolutely, yes, for sure. How can we help? Well, I filed for divorce from my wife about a month ago.
Starting point is 01:28:19 Lots of transpired since, we're kind of trying to maybe make it work, going to marriage counseling. In the interim of all this, we kind of split our finances about two or three months ago due to her spending and daughter. That's a long story. Um, so fast forward to this, um, this last week, I got a, uh, a bonus from work, a $30,000 bonus. Um, by the time I was put into bank, it was about 24, a $30,000 bonus. By the time I was put in the bank, it was about $24,000. I currently owe $11,000 on the credit card.
Starting point is 01:28:52 Most of that is for the divorce attorney. And then the other issue I have is I have, during COVID, we had two credit cards with Chase that we quit paying because we lost our jobs and obviously employed now, but there's a lawsuit pending against me and those are about $26,000 each. Um, so I don't know what to do with this bonus money. One, I don't know if I should tell the wife or not, because we're not divorced.
Starting point is 01:29:17 We're trying to work that that's part of it. But the other part is, do I keep the cash and try to settle with chase? Do I pay off the current credit card that I have so I can get me back to debt free, sort of-ish, other than my home? Just not real sure. Sure, yeah, absolutely. Any other money saved? I have just a couple thousand dollars in the bank, nothing major.
Starting point is 01:29:41 Okay, okay. By a couple like six or like two? Like two. Okay. Yes, two. So the bonus is 3000, yes? No, the bonus is 24,000. 24,000, my hearing is off today. Okay, so what do you think you can settle these chase cards
Starting point is 01:30:00 for, have you kind of floated it out there to them? I talked to the debt attorney that filed the lawsuits he said they may be a 25,000 or a 25% reduction. Yeah. So he's thinking they could probably settle for about 20,000 each. That'd be a total of 40. Okay so there are two separate cases so I don't one's coming up the 1st of September and the other one I don't have a date on yet. Okay so the one coming up the 1st of September and the other one I don't have a date on yet. Okay, so the one coming up the 1st of September, if you can settle it, I think there's part of this
Starting point is 01:30:29 since it's already like gone to court, like it's already progressed to the point where you're gonna have to pay something. I do think there's a smart part that would hold onto that money and not put it on the other $11,000 debt because you know this is coming and you know you're gonna be on the other $11,000 debt because you know this is coming and you know you're going to be on the hook for paying whether it's the full sum or you know a reduced
Starting point is 01:30:49 amount. So yeah, so and then I guess just go ahead. Well, I was going to say yes. So and anything obviously you get in that lawsuit having writing and I would tell them, hey, I have $24,000. Well, I guess they're separate lawsuits you were saying. Okay, yeah. So I think getting them down as much as possible,
Starting point is 01:31:13 obviously would be the goal. And ideally not going into collections and all of that, that you kind of just take care of it. And if that's the case, then yeah, you have 4,000. When does the other lawsuit hit? This one's September, do you know when the other one will be? I don't know. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:31:27 I mean, they've already kind of hit. This is obviously been aggressive. So now it's like going to the trial thing and all this other stuff where I'm gonna have to pay chase. It's already been on my credit. Like all that stuff's already kind of happened. How long is this? Oh, sorry.
Starting point is 01:31:38 Was it all under your name or is your ex, I guess she's not your ex, is your wife's name attached to this as well? No, they were all mine. They were cards that I had prior to our marriage. And then we've always done good. And then we spent a bunch of money and then we tried to get out of debt
Starting point is 01:31:53 and then we were doing okay. And then COVID hit, we both literally lost our jobs in a week. And it was pay mortgage and feed our children or pay this credit card. Well, we chose a home and children. As you should. Yeah. How much are you making a year, John? I bring in my base salaries, 104 and my bonuses are in the 60 to 80 thousand dollar range
Starting point is 01:32:14 annually. Okay. And with her, what does, what does she make? We own a small business, a food truck business, so she brings in roughly, I would say, $60,000 a year. Okay. And considering you guys are somewhat separated, I don't know if it's through legal means or not, have you guys separated your finances? Yes, we did that about two or three months prior, and that was kind of her final straw for us, but her spending her like final straw for us. But her spending was really the issue for me.
Starting point is 01:32:48 So, okay. So these three accounts, are these the only debts that you're on the hook for? Is there a car? Is there anything else because there is a Cadillac that we purchased together. That's her car, not my car. So in the divorce, she would get the car. Okay. Kind of the thing. She would get the carpet
Starting point is 01:33:05 I have a truck. It's paid for other than If we were divorced today, the only debt I would have would be the two chase and the 11,000 or credit card Okay, but but you're making you know on a good year 180 plus a year. Yeah Right. So I mean when I look at these debts and knowing that one of them is gonna be settled You should have this knocked out like lickety split. What's this? What's your living situation? Currently living is she moved out Thursday so literally just two days ago. She moved out She's living with a friend and her two kids and I'm living in my house with my two kids and what's this?
Starting point is 01:33:46 And her two kids and I'm living in my house with my two kids and what was the second second marriage then for both of you? Yeah, yes, okay And are you able to cover the mortgage in a way that it's no more than 25% of your take-home without her income added to it? Mortgage is $3,000 a month. So that's not a problem. Okay That's great. Yep. So Yeah, so to answer your question of why you called in for sure, I would take the one that had the lawsuit attached to it, go ahead and knock that out. And then like Jade's saying, I mean, I would cut back on everything until you get this mess cleaned up. And then I think you do have this kind of fresh start. But I also, I'm
Starting point is 01:34:18 cheering on for you guys, you know, that possibly I heard a little bit of hope there at the beginning of the call that you guys can, yeah, I think you do some work, do some counseling therapy, and I pray that it is reconciled. I think that's always the best hope for this. We never wanna see marriages torn apart, and he said part of it was because of her spending, but we do see money issues play into that.
Starting point is 01:34:43 But always, you guys remember that those money issues usually is an indicator of something else going on underneath and that's why having, you know, professionals on your side to really dig in to know why. I mean, we are complex people and the way we, whether it's Medicaid or whatever it may be, our habits come out sideways. And when you can get to the root of that, if you are as a person,
Starting point is 01:35:07 that's really a beautiful thing. So John, we're cheering you guys on. I really do hope that there's reconciliation. Um, but just from the, the money standpoint on your side, um, I think you can have a lot of this cleaned up really quickly. So I'm thankful you got, got back on your feet job wise since COVID. Cause I know that was a pain point for a lot of people. Absolutely. No, I feel like today, Rachel, we saw a big theme of divorce, which is tough. And it's so difficult. But I think it just drives home the point even more like, I've heard Dave say it, marriages need maintenance. Like you need that regular the same way you bring
Starting point is 01:35:41 your car in for a checkup, you go to the doctor for a physical every year. Like you need a regular rhythm of let's go see a counselor. Like let's just make sure everything's good. And let's make sure, you know, pre-marital counseling, all those things that are checks and balances to make sure that you're operating at an optimal, safe level in your marriage. Yep. And we have Dr. John Deloney here on our team, you guys, so check out his content in books because it's kind of in this whole realm of life. This is The Ramsey Show. Does having more money and less stress sound nice but feel impossible?
Starting point is 01:36:24 Well, in my brand new book, Breaking Free from Broke, I share my story of going from Does having more money and less stress sound nice, but feel impossible? Well, in my brand new book, Breaking Free from Broke, I share my story of going from broke to millionaire and exactly how I did it. You'll learn about the money traps and cultural lies out there designed to keep you brainwashed and stressed out from credit card schemes to mortgage myths to investing traps. So if you're not where you want to be financially, I can help
Starting point is 01:36:42 you finally get ahead. You can get Breaking Free from Broke today at ramsysolutions.com slash store. That's ramsysolutions.com slash store. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show. Up next we have Kashim in Portland, Oregon. Hi, welcome to the show. Hi, Rachel. Thank you so much for taking the call. Yes, absolutely. How can we help? I appreciate it. I've been watching Dave Ramsey for the longest time and I love the show and everything that Dave does and you as well. Thank you. My question is,
Starting point is 01:37:41 we make good money, my brother and I, we run an assisted living. Um, and we, uh, have paid off all our consumer debt, no car loans, no student loans, we have invested into real estate and we have about six properties. Um, but for some reason, you know, it still feels like we are paycheck to paycheck because everything that we make, we invested back into real estate. And then I was wondering, should we maybe stop investing and start paying off like we did with our consumer debt, the cars and student loans, pay off these properties. And then once all of those properties are paid off, then maybe start investing again with the cash that we
Starting point is 01:38:32 will have. Okay. How much are you guys making a year income wise for you? Together we make probably about 400,000. Okay. So do you take $200,000 and he takes $200,000? Yes. Okay. And how much debt is on the six properties total? It's about $2.5 million.
Starting point is 01:38:59 Okay. And... Oh, also... Yeah. Sorry. Um, and also, um, sorry, one more thing. Uh, we have for 401k and I know, um, also we've been nothing in 401k for the past two years. So we're thinking maybe we need to stop that.
Starting point is 01:39:16 We do the Mac, we max it out for the past two years. Okay. What's your full time job? So running that living. Yes. Okay. That's right. You said that. Okay. Just to clarify all of it together, the income from the assisted living, the income from the properties is the 400,000, right? Not just the properties. Correct. Okay. So could you I mean, I'm thinking, you know,
Starting point is 01:39:49 to relieve some of the pressure, cause you said that you feel like you're still living paycheck to paycheck and you know, making 200 grand. If you're, yeah, if you're making mortgage payments, you have renters and all the six. We do. Yeah. The properties are all cash flowing. But I mean, whatever we make in the business, save it up and then we just go and buy another property. Yeah, so I would, I would, yep.
Starting point is 01:40:13 So I would pause, maybe even go a step or two backwards, possibly, just to give you some breathing room. So instead of going and continuing to invest in these properties and taking leverage out on all of them, that's what's causing you to feel so tied down or right, like with no margin. So I would take some of that income, throw it at some of these properties to pay it off faster and I would cash flow it. So that may even mean Kashim to list out the six and say, hey, maybe we sell two. You know, the equity from the two could help pay for,
Starting point is 01:40:46 you know, pay down some of the other three and our cashflow, because, you know, we don't mind having real estate. I think it's a great opportunity, but when you are leveraged in it and you continue to leveraging in it, it's gonna eventually eat up your income, right? Cause it's not gonna be perfect,
Starting point is 01:41:03 but having that paid for income, when the income comes in from the rentals and it's all yours, up your income, right? Cause it's not gonna be perfect, but having that paid for income, when the income comes in from the rentals and it's all yours, then suddenly you feel like, oh, we're making the money that I feel like we should be making, right? I mean, you have $2.5 million worth of rental properties. You should feel like we're doing really good, but it's not working out that way.
Starting point is 01:41:20 No, it seems like, you know, on the paper, we have a lot, but then, you know, kind of cash broke. Yep. So yeah, exactly. Exactly. So I would, I would free up. I would be okay with you keeping a couple of them, you know, knowing that, hey, we're
Starting point is 01:41:35 going to, we're going to snowball this and pay them off quickly. Cause did you guys get them a few years ago or have you gotten them recently? A few years ago, we started back in like 2022. Okay. And then the last one we just purchased this year. Yep. So I would stop purchasing and again, I would sell a couple of them, but I would list them out and say, hey, here's what they're worth.
Starting point is 01:41:59 Here's what we owe on them. What's smart to do this. And are you doing this all with your brother? Yes. Okay. Are both of your names on your brother? Yes. Okay. Are both of your names on the, on the notes? Yes. Okay. So would that be something that he's willing to do as well?
Starting point is 01:42:14 Yes, actually he's putting his name in the listening to, um, we, uh, we set it together. We're doing things, uh, you know, together. Actually he's the one that got on the phone and calling the show actually. Okay. Okay. Well, we have a little bit of time, because I would be interested. Do you have the numbers off the top of your head of what each property is worth and how much you owe on them? Yes, I can look it up in a second. And also, what I was going to say, regarding the 401k,
Starting point is 01:42:50 should we keep investing into that 401k? Yes, I would. No, you said pause it. Yeah, no, I would. Yeah, I would keep going. Because that's going to be, that's going to be consistent. Yep. Did you say you wanted the... Yeah, let's go through them one by one. Okay.
Starting point is 01:43:11 So first one is condo. We owe 150. And another one is a house. What's the one that's one... Before you go, the one that's 150, what could you sell it for? Probably like 250, 260. Okay, perfect. Keep going.
Starting point is 01:43:28 And then another one is we owe 230, that one is about 410, 420 right now. And then we have a condo, we owe 450, and that one is about 600. And then we have another condo or a duplex, duplex we owe 340 and that one is like five. And then we have our primary houses, but not the lindos again. Okay, that doesn't do it. Okay, that was the two, part of two. Now on the primary mortgages,
Starting point is 01:44:01 you are the only person on your mortgage and he's the only person on his mortgage, right? Okay. So, I mean, Rachel, I know what I'm thinking right off the bat. Yeah, I mean, I'm probably, you know, and again, you can rearrange some of these. I would take the ones that are probably in better condition, less hassle, ones that are in better part of the city that you can rent out that's more stable. But you could sell two of these, you know, rearrange some of the city that you can rent out that's more stable, but you could sell two of these, rearrange some of the numbers,
Starting point is 01:44:26 because you even have two paid for properties there. And I would, and I know you and your brother are doing this together, but my advice, you probably won't take it, because she was to do it individually. I think when you have a partner in all of this and we both own it, it can get really messy really fast, but that's just my two cents.
Starting point is 01:44:42 Well, there's part of that, because here's's the thing if you were in this deal alone my first thing would be like hey okay look for instance property number three it's a duplex I don't know what side of town it's in but I'm thinking okay it's more work to rent it out it's two places and you owe the most on it and the gain is pretty decent so I'm like okay I'd probably go for that one first just based on little knowledge here but I'd want to then take that money and pay off my personal residence before I reach over and do properties. But since you're in this with
Starting point is 01:45:13 your brother, it doesn't necessarily work that way. So that's kind of just one of the ways that it muddies the water a little bit on this. But that being said, you could still reach over you could pay off the one, property number two probably if you made that sale, and then property number four if you sold it and you cleared out property number one. There's a lot of options here. Yeah, there's a lot of options, yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:32 So yeah, I think you could make one or two moves here. And I think what that would do again is if you have two paid for properties, you're getting rental income and then you and your wife say, hey, our next goal is to pay off our primary home. Cause how much do you owe on your primary? About 340. Okay.
Starting point is 01:45:51 And it's worth about 730, 740. We bought it back in 2017. Okay, that's great. Yeah. So yeah, you can go down the steps there. Or if you want to go real crazy, which I don't think you'll probably will, you could sell everything and put some of this
Starting point is 01:46:04 towards your primary. But again, I think you'll probably will. You could sell everything and put some of this towards your primary. But again, I think you and your brother can need to sit down and just say, hey, what are the properties that we're confident in? And I think you can keep, maybe two of them, sell two, rearrange some of this. And I think it's gonna relieve it because you guys are kind of playing the game.
Starting point is 01:46:20 And, Kasheem, you guys are smart. So honestly, at the end of the day, once you have all this kind of cleaned up and you guys are making a better income, then take your time and save because some of these you know you bought for $150, there's still deals out there. I mean you can still go and you know buy something crappy and fix it up, put some money into it and rent it. So that's still a possibility but just doing it with cash is going to give you less stress, which is what we want for you. Thanks for the call. I was sick and tired of being sick and tired, bankrupt with a toddler and a brand-new baby at home, scared doesn't even begin to cover it, but I got mad
Starting point is 01:47:11 enough to change. I started using God's and grandma's ways of handling money. That journey became the total money makeover, a plan everyday people can use to take control of their money. Millions have changed their lives following the plan in this book and found hope. Start your makeover today at ramsysolutions.com slash store. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show. We're going to the phones and we have Jake in Houston calling next. Hey, Jake, welcome to the show. Hey, how are you guys doing today?
Starting point is 01:48:05 We're doing great. How can we help? So, I have a chronic condition and I'm currently on baby step six, but I do not have any life insurance for my wife and family. I'm having trouble getting life insurance and so I'm wondering if I should be putting money aside, uh, since I don't have the life insurance option. Yeah. What's, what's the condition? Can I ask? I'd really rather not say that. The doctor says I have about 10 more years of working time before I'd be really, really in a critical position.
Starting point is 01:48:43 I'm so sorry. That's okay. He either healed him this life or the next. So yeah. That's right. Well, you've put yourself in a really good position with your family. So kudos to you there. And I know they're going to be very grateful. The fact that you're in baby step six is amazing. So that tells me that you don't have debt. You guys have got a significant level of savings, which is nice.
Starting point is 01:48:52 And I'm guessing you've been investing all this time. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things.
Starting point is 01:49:00 I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been doing a lot of things. I'm guessing you've been baby step six is amazing. So that tells me that you don't have debt. You guys have got a significant level of savings, which is nice. And I'm guessing you've been investing all this time. Can I ask like, do you have a nest egg? We do. We have a $1.4 million nest egg. Okay. Wow. We make about 180,000 base pay and then about $150,000 bonus. Wow.
Starting point is 01:49:28 So, great income, but all of our money is in retirement accounts. And how old are you and your wife? I'm 39 and my wife is 42. Okay. Do you guys have kids? I have one child. Yes. Okay What is is she working or is she staying home? She stays at home. Okay
Starting point is 01:49:52 How much do you guys have left on the house to pay off? 340,000 340. Okay, and what's your timeline on paying off the house when you've talked to it with your wife? When do you think it'll be done? About three years if we put all of our excess income towards the house. Okay. Um, seven years where I've got to be totally ready for medical and retirement. You said you've got seven years until you feel like you need to be totally ready. Is that what you said? 10 years total. If it takes three years to pay off the house now, then seven years until you feel like you need to be totally ready? Is that what you said? You have 10 years total. If it takes three years to pay off the house now, then seven years after that to save for everything else.
Starting point is 01:50:32 Okay. Will you be able to bring in, I know you said, well, you'll have to stop work in probably two years. Does that mean physically going to a location or will you still be bringing in income at that point or probably not? Stopping working 10 years. I'm sorry. Oh I'm sorry. Oh, I thought you said two. Yeah, 10 years. Oh, okay. That's way. I'm happy to hear that. Okay. So the good news is, you know, you, the first problem was, Hey, I don't have life insurance, but the good news is you're going to be self insurable. You, you've set, you and your,
Starting point is 01:51:04 your wife have set your family up in a really, really great way. Cause the thought here is in that I'm not even running any numbers. I just know that a lump sum is gonna double every seven years. And the point that you already have 1.4 million and then there's this 10 year horizon
Starting point is 01:51:19 and you know, you're making over $300,000 a year and the house is gonna pay it off. You're not gonna have a payment in the world. And so I think that your wife is gonna be okay. What I would do is I'd probably sit down with a SmartVestor Pro because I wanna make sure, to your point, that she's able to access the money she needs even if it's before her being 59 and a half.
Starting point is 01:51:43 All right. Yeah, because I'm thinking if, you know, 10 years from now, she will be, yeah, 52. So there'll be about that seven year gap. But I do wonder, Jake, because you guys are making such great money, do you foresee yourself making around that 300, 330,000 a year for the next 10 years, if not going up? Or do you see it going down at all
Starting point is 01:52:06 because of health issues? It'll continue to go up. So luckily I am an engineer, so I can work remotely or I have options. So I mean, yeah, so if you think about it, Jake, if you guys pay off this home in three years, which is what I would do, you'd have seven years left of working,
Starting point is 01:52:23 of making that amount of money. You guys could stash away so much just in a high-yield savings account, that she could, that you guys can live off of after you stop working for that time, that seven-ish years between retirement age, and then once you guys hit that age, you'll be able to access, yeah, I mean, like you said,
Starting point is 01:52:42 it's gonna be over three, four, it'll be $4 million by that point. Oh yeah, and SmartVestor Pro is gonna help you figure out like that best bridge. Is it a high yield savings? Is it a brokerage account? Is it another vehicle that you're able to get to that money but it can also still have some gain on it,
Starting point is 01:52:59 a decent amount of gain. Yeah, hey, I hate that this situation is what it is. But you're a great dad and a great husband for setting this up with your family. Thank you. Truly. Yeah. Jake, thank you for calling. If you stay on the line, Christian is going to pick up and maybe we can hook you up with a Smart
Starting point is 01:53:21 Vestor Pro. And we'll help you show show you exactly where to look, get a couple of names so you can call them and kind of just see who you're comfortable with. But I'm with Jade, I'm praying, nothing, I pray for healing on this side of heaven for you and your family and I'm so sorry. And you know, it's one of those things that when life, there are things we just, we can't control.
Starting point is 01:53:43 Health is for sure one of those and on when life, there are things we just, we can't control, you know, health is for sure one of those. And on this show, we get that call a lot of just, you know, things happen. And one of the best ways, it doesn't make it better, but it does bring a level of peace in an area of life is when you have your money under control. And so that's- And when you've set your family up,
Starting point is 01:54:02 that worst case scenario, I know everything's covered and I mean these are the reasons that we teach you need a will you need life insurance you gotta you gotta pay off your debt you've got because no one predicts these things. That's right. That's right. No, you know, no one predicts it. Yeah. Oh, Jake, we're praying for you and your family.
Starting point is 01:54:21 Thanks. I'm so glad you called. I hope that helped. Up next we have Ken in Wichita. Hey, Ken, welcome to the show. Hey, Rachel. I appreciate all that you, your dad, and the Ramsey personalities do. You guys are a true blessing.
Starting point is 01:54:36 Thank you. I have a question today, hoping you could pressure test something regarding my pension. So my wife and I are FPU grads, debt free, including the house. I was laid off about three weeks ago. I'm 55. And since I'll be separating from the company, I can start taking the pension now. And if I do that and I plug those numbers into Excel, it seems to me like I'd be crazy
Starting point is 01:55:06 to not start taking it at 55 versus waiting till 62 even though the numbers are higher because my calculations show the 19 years for it to catch up if I wait till 62 versus taking it now and investing it at 8%, like I would assume Dave would say, it never catches up. So am I crazy to start taking it at 55 versus waiting until 62? No, I don't think you're crazy. And especially if you do something with that money that helps to grow it. So even if you put it somewhere that you're going to be making more than if it sits in that pension, I think that's ideal. Um, so how are you,
Starting point is 01:55:48 um, do you guys need it to live off of, or you're just thinking cause of the math might as well take it now because we'll be able to, to get more out of it. Yeah, totally a math situation. Obviously I've, I've, I've, I've got to go find another job, but we're in good shape on that. I'm employable and we'll do that. But just talking to some peers that are in the same situation from this layoff, they were like, Hey, why would you take it now? But I'm just, I'm an Excel guy. So I want to get in there and then use the investment calculator at 8%.
Starting point is 01:56:20 And I'm just like, man, not taking it. Because you're thinking you're going to turn around and reinvest that money. Is that what you're thinking? True. Yes. That's the plan. But even if you don't, um, just the wrong numbers, the seven years, uh, in order to make up that seven years of withdrawals, it would take 19 years and
Starting point is 01:56:40 put me at like 81 before, uh, it would catch up if I started taking it at 62. So I just want to make sure I wasn't missing something. I know the taxes might be a little bit different when I'm retired, that type of thing, but it just seems like take it now is mathematically the way to go. And I've always heard Dave say, you know, the pension, you know, it's not yours until it's yours. So like, yeah, that's the thing., it's not yours until it's yours. So, like, get it in the hopper type thing. That's right, yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:08 The good thing about it is it puts you back in control of what you do with it, even if you're going to go back and reinvest it. And the truth is too, Ken, you've done such a great job that, I mean, you guys are completely debt-free. Like, if you take it now or you take it six years, you're gonna be okay. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:57:23 Like, I don't think you're gonna make this dire mistake, but anytime you can get money, even in a lump sum in some situations, putting it back in your control, you're usually better off than leaving it somewhere else. So I hope that helps. Thanks, Ken, for the call. Our Our scripture of the day comes from 1st Timothy 618, command them to do good, to be rich in good deeds, and to be generous and willing to share.
Starting point is 01:58:19 Shonda Rhimes says, be a doer, not a dreamer. Good deal. I appreciate that. Put some stuff into action people. Put some stuff into action. I know that's right. All right. Going to the phones we have Sarah in Fort Myers. Hey Sarah, welcome to the show. Hi ladies. Thanks so much for taking my call. Absolutely. How can we help? So I'm looking for a bit of direction. The long story short is I just found the Ramsey Show podcast a couple months ago when I was pregnant. It was our first child. Yay. Yeah, thank you. He's two months old now and
Starting point is 01:59:00 he's absolutely beautiful. My question is, when I was six months pregnant, my husband was laid off from his job, which was extremely stressful. We had a lot of medical complications with my pregnancy and then with the delivery as well. And when he was laid off, we ended up having to pay an arm and a leg to extend our insurance policy through the former employer. So we unfortunately had to burn through what little savings we had, um, to afford that. And now we're pretty much starting from scratch with a newborn. And, um, my husband is, um,
Starting point is 01:59:40 really wanting to try to pay off our credit cards and get our debt down. And I'm trying to decide if we should try to put more money towards our emergency fund, which we don't have now. I'm going back to work kind of part-time. So I'm trying to decide if I need to go back full-time, should we sell one of our cars? I don't know. I'm listening to a lot of stories online.
Starting point is 02:00:01 You've got a lot on your mind. You've got a lot on your mind. I mean, the good news is you did what we tell people to do. When you were pregnant, you stacked up because you don't know what's going to happen. And so you went into stork mode and you needed what you saved up. And so no guilt on that. You don't need to be feeling bad. Sometimes people go through their emergency fund and they feel guilty that they used it.
Starting point is 02:00:22 And I'm like, no, that's what it was there for. And so you did right. But now that the storm is over and the baby is here, now you can get back onto the baby steps. And yeah, it's getting that thousand dollars back saved again. And to your husband's point, whatever the smallest debt is, if it's the credit cards, how much debt do you guys have?
Starting point is 02:00:44 Well, we have two car loans. All together, our debt is probably between 35 and 40 between the two cars and then some credit card and then of course the medical. Tell me the real numbers so we can really see. So on his car, we owe about $14,000. My car, we owe about $21,000, I believe. $21,000? His car just, yeah, $21,000. We just started having some mechanical issues with his car, so we were considering selling that because it is worth right about what we owe on it.
Starting point is 02:01:20 So we thought about going down to one car, which we could do. It would be a challenge, but we could do it. So we thought about going down to one car, which we could do. It would be a challenge, but we could do it. I love that with the baby. It's a little tricky, but we could try to find a way. The hard part is my husband's job. He's really not loving it. He's exhausted emotionally from the presidency and all the medical stuff that I went through. He, sorry, he was really scared. It was a lot to handle. And now he's considering changing careers because he absolutely hates the field that he's in. So we're on this little bit instability storm right now.
Starting point is 02:01:57 I would press pause. I would press pause for a second because you guys have just come through a unknown difficult season, right? It was the layoff, then the baby came, then there was no insurance. So there's part of this where I would love to create just a quick sense of like we're getting our bearings, we've got our bearings before we add another big change into the mix. Because that would mean he just got this new job right? Yeah, he's only just been on the insurance this month for the new place. Yeah, so then there's they had to wait like 90 days and don't get me wrong like I'm all for happy. I'm all for people being happy in their work, but we need to just cool out for a second
Starting point is 02:02:40 like let's get this baby home. Let's get our heads around what the financial picture is. And then that can decide what we need to do going forward because, and I mean, I get it, everybody wants to be happy at work. But there could be a period of time where he's like, I'm doing this because I need to do this to get the family on good footing. And then I'll be able to go and pursue more of what I want to do. So the 14,000 car, 21,000 car. Well, I was going to just add to that, Sarah, that usually when there's some level of like a traumatic experience, which kind of sounds like y'all walk through, don't make knee
Starting point is 02:03:14 jerk reactions. And we say this if someone's had a death close to them or, you know, if something big happens in life that really kind of takes you out emotionally making big moves in life is not smart So waiting before he quits and all of this like I I would so I echo Jade for sure and for you guys Yeah, that because how much is he making now? He makes about 85 but he I'm not so much concerned about him quitting he's Totally in the mindset of I need to provide for my family I'll do what I have to do yeah plus he wouldn't quit until he had something else lined up right exactly okay he's afraid that they're gonna let him go again I think he's got a
Starting point is 02:03:57 little bit of PTSD from being laid off previously which wasn't any fault of his but the the company that he's at now like the new job that was supposed to stabilize it, it's not really a good fit. What type of work is it? It's the way the business is set up. So, I'm sorry. What type of work does he do? He works in accounting and financial analyst positions, mostly for home builders and construction
Starting point is 02:04:20 firms. And that's... So, being the numbers guy, he's tracking all the mistakes, he finds a lot of things that are wrong and everybody thinks he's the bad guy and it's just kind of the way that the industry goes I think. Okay, well even more reason then for you guys to really get laser focused on this debt because that's what's creating instability and a lot of risk in your life. So aside from the cars, which I love the idea if you can break even on one of these, even if you go and you
Starting point is 02:04:48 buy something a lot cheaper in cash. I like that idea if having a one car family doesn't work. But back to your initial question. Yeah, up until something does happen. Right now, I think we're operating on a lot of fear and what if but the truth is, you're home, the baby's healthy, he's got a job. And right now nothing's happening. So I would say, okay, and what if, but the truth is, you're home, the baby's healthy, he's got a job, and right now nothing's happening. So I would say, okay, let's push pause on the baby steps,
Starting point is 02:05:09 get that thousand there. Do you have any more money left in savings above a thousand? Not really. Okay, that's fine. I think he has, yeah, he has a Roth, I think he set up a few years ago that's got a little bit in it. No don't touch that I meant liquid savings. Okay. No, so yeah, you're listing them smallest to largest and you guys are getting on
Starting point is 02:05:33 The same page you're sitting down tonight and go. Okay, we've been through a lot It's time for us to make this right. We've got a family now. Let's clean up our mess and let's decide that moving forward we're gonna move methodically we're gonna make together, we're going to get out of debt and I mean kudos to you. Cheers on a brand new life. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, it's a mixture. We're absolutely in love with our baby boy.
Starting point is 02:05:58 He's healthy, praise God. It was a really stressful time getting through all those issues. So we're thankful but we're also trying to find a way to Start looking up, you know, it just seems like one thing after another and then the car breaks, you know And then the you know, the boss doesn't like ever, you know, whatever just seems one thing after all right So I'm just kind of looking through some keys of mine for a few weeks Yeah, and you'll find to Sarah, you know know, life in general, and then you throw kids in the mix and this is, it magnifies this too, but it, it's, it does, it can feel like seasons
Starting point is 02:06:33 of life. It's like two steps forward, three steps back, one step forward, two steps back. Oh my gosh. And then, and then another season hits and it's like, wow, this is a peaceful season and we're thankful for this. And then something else happens, right? I mean, it's just it is the rhythm of life. And you guys are experiencing that. But in big ways, I mean, kids job, I mean, these are big adult things, right? That you know they are that you feel. So I think getting some control around the money,
Starting point is 02:06:59 I think is going to give you a level of peace, even if the debt is still there. Just being on the same page with your husband, knowing here's how much we're spending on groceries, here's what, like there's just a plan in place. And it allows you to pour that energy into something. Yes, that's right, into something else, yep, for sure. And I do, and we hear you loud and clear, and I think a goal would eventually be for him
Starting point is 02:07:18 to be in a great environment working. Yeah, you don't wanna work for a jerk, you know, for so long, so we're all about that too. So great, well work for a jerk, you know, for so long. So right. We're all about that, too. Yeah. So great. Well, thanks for the call, Sarah. We really appreciate it. Thanks to all the gentlemen in the booth. Thank you, Jade, to being great cohost. And thank you, America, for listening. Remember to take control of your money and create a life you love. You

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