The Ramsey Show - Escape the Paycheck-to-Paycheck Trap
Episode Date: September 27, 2024Ways to watch Dave Interview Trump 📱Download the Ramsey Network app for early access October 1 ▶️ Get notifications for the YouTube premiere on October 2 Dave Ramsey, Dr. John Delony, and Ja...de Warshaw answer your questions and discuss: Dave previews interview with Donald Trump, "How do I bounce back financially?" "I'm frustrated with how my mom handles money," "Stay with our debt consolidation company?" "Should I save for my daughter's college now?" How do I get my husband to be the provider? Support Our Sponsors: 🌱 Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp 🏥 Learn more about Christian Healthcare Ministries 🏡 Get started today with Churchill Mortgage 🏦 Go to FAIRWINDS Credit Union for an exclusive account bundle! 💻 Visit NetSuite today to learn more 🚨 Get 15% off a medical emergency kit at The Wellness Company 🏛Get started with YRefy or call 844-2-RAMSEY 🔐 Visit Zander Insurance for your free instant quote today! Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! 🎟️ Reserve your seat for Summit 2025 today! 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! 📈 For help with investing, get connected with a SmartVestor Pro. 🛳️ Live Like No One Else Cruise Listen to more from Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions is a paid, non-client promoter of SmartVestor Pros. Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
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Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do work that they love, and create actual and amazing relationships.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, Ph.D. in counseling, number one best-selling author and host of one of the hottest shows on the Ramsey Network, the old Dr. John Deloney Show.
He's my co-host today as we take your questions at 888-825-5225.
Those of you that follow this show closely are freaking out because I'm not usually here on Fridays.
I don't work on Friday.
But I decided to drop by and do an hour of the show with Dr. John today because I had an unusual thing happen.
And we wanted to tell you guys about it and let you know what's happening.
Our team, several weeks ago, reached out to the Trump organization
and reached out to the Harris organization, Vice President Harris, President Donald Trump,
and offered the ability to sit down and have a discussion about ideas.
Because I'm sick and tired of all the months slinging, I'd like to talk about ideas.
And because I think ideas are worth fighting over and arguing about.
And if you want to sit down and talk about ideas and do a long-form interview,
the Harris camp has our request.
The last word we got was under review.
So not been a yes, not been a no from them. But I flew to New York. And at this time yesterday, I was in Trump Tower interviewing President Donald Trump for an hour and or for 35 minutes. Anyway, ended up being a little quicker than we thought it was going to go. But just to sit down and to talk about ideas and so forth. And it was fun.
It was interesting.
I've never done anything like that.
I've interviewed presidents or past presidents before, but obviously he is a different one,
especially in front of a microphone because he knows microphones and production.
He's been on TV for years, and he's very cognizant of what he's doing.
It's very interesting.
So it was fun. It was very interesting. So it was fun.
It was very interesting.
Um,
you get a different thing off.
My contention is this,
that anyone that hates someone is just,
you know,
there's a few people you should hate Hitler.
Okay.
But he's not Hitler.
And there's a few people you,
you,
if you want to hate him,
you can hate him.
But I got to tell you,
if you dislike someone's positions on things, if you spend an hour
with them and just listen to them and find out their heartbeats and that they have that
they love their kids, it's hard to be a racist.
If you spend time with people of a different color, it's hard to be a sexist.
If you spend time with high performing people of the opposite sex, it's hard to hate people
when you spend time with them performing people of the opposite sex. It's hard to hate people when you spend time with them.
That's my theory.
So and that was my attempt at doing this.
So it may be boring as crud to some of you.
We had a good time with it.
And I think you'll laugh some.
And I think you'll hear some things when the interview comes out that you didn't expect.
But I also don't think there's anything in there that's like breaking news.
I don't think Dave Ramsey has got a scoop for sure. We got exactly what he wanted us to get.
Sure. Because he's a pro. You're not going to get something he didn't want you to get.
And they did not ask to review the questions in advance.
Actually, an hour before the social media guy got nervous and said, can I see the questions,
but not, but not Trump staff.
The social media guy was worried about what was going to end up on social media because
they're very cognizant of the power of social media.
So anyway, it's fun.
So here's the deal.
It will come out on the Ramsey network app, which is a free download for your phone or
your computer.
Um, and it will come out Tuesday on the Ramsey Network app.
And on Wednesday, we'll put the interview out long form
on all of our podcast channels and our YouTube channels.
Completely free.
All of it's free either way.
There's no hook in this.
There's nothing else.
But it was, yeah, I don't, I mean, i do a lot of stuff behind closed doors and go
to high security situations i've never seen security like this in my life it was unbelievable
well i saw there was a tweet that went out that was like iran's trying to kill me and he'll never
get me and i'm surrounded by missiles and whatever right as whatever yeah i mean as you were walking
in that just getting in front of that building getting into that building going up an elevator
in that building going into a certain room in that building where the president's going to appear
later uh it's an interesting process it's uh especially with all the crap going on with him
in particular but um they are doing their job that's for sure it's uh well i want to say this on behalf
of i don't have a normal job right i'm a youtuber as my son says and a radio host i don't have a
normal job but um on behalf of like you say this often if everything was just to go away you and
sharon are gonna be fine right like if if some big economic correction you
and sharon are gonna be fine you don't owe anybody any money and you've done well we were in a meeting
the other day and i i i appreciate as a guy who's just a regular guy i had to go talk to my neighbor
yesterday or something that happened with my dog i'm trying to figure out how to get my yard mode
for you too yes i i'm just as a regular guy living in a neighborhood
in a meeting the other day you said what you just said i want to double click on it i'm sick of
everybody just throwing mud at each other and every day you come to work you're the only ceo
in america that i know of that still spends three hours a day with their front end customer
listening to hurting people all day like i want to get some real answers to some real questions and i'm i'm
like i want to give both camps an opportunity just to say okay here's how i'm actually going
to help people with eggs here's i'm going to help people with like the cost of it's just hard in
life right now and so thank you for being somebody who at least wants to say i i'll use my platform
to speak up on people who are hurting because i talk to them every day and y'all apparently don't because we're not nobody's talking about them.
Right.
And so I appreciate you being willing to do that.
Oh, it's fun.
Yeah.
Obviously, we're catching hell.
Of course.
Well, everybody will catch hell for everybody.
All the anti-Trump people are just raining, raining acid on our parade.
But well, that's fine.
I mean, it's I this is not an endorsement of anybody.
I'm I do not worship. I'm not star of anybody. I do not worship.
I'm not starstruck.
I'm not.
It's not because I'm arrogant or something.
I've just been doing this crap a long time.
These people are interesting to me, though,
because the type of person that plays at that level is very interesting to me.
The level of energy that they have.
I mean, he's 78 years old.
He spoke in North Carolina like two hours old he spoke in north carolina like two
hours before he was in trump tower on in front of our cameras i mean he and he doesn't stop i mean
where is he getting all this energy i'll be worn out and i'm 64 but um but yeah and and he's shorter
than i thought he was i thought the guy was massive didn't you you have that impression
that he's like six six or something something? He's not. No?
He's just a little bit taller than me.
Than you?
Than me.
And you're just a little bit taller than George Campbell.
You know, your weight loss.
Yeah, careful.
Your weight loss.
Everybody's taller than George Campbell.
But yeah, I mean, it was interesting.
That kind of stuff is interesting to me.
So our first question, I'll go ahead and preview it.
I just said, okay, Mr. President, we talk to real people every day.
Let me tell you what they're concerned about.
They're not concerned about a bunch of the stuff you're talking about. The stuff they're concerned about, $7 eggs, $5 gas, 7% interest rates, and house prices going up faster than their
wages are going up. This black cloud that's over our economic situation right now. And
we can talk about how it got there, we can talk about what you used to do, you can talk
about the current administration, but I don't really want to. What I we can talk about how it got there we can talk about what you used to do you can talk about the current administration but i don't really want to what i want to talk about
is what you're going to do in the first 90 days to get this black cloud off of america and that
was my first question and i'll ask miss vice president harris's exact same question if we
get the opportunity yeah so and i think it's all contact couched with we're still going to show up
and tell americans you like you can't wait on them.
Yeah.
Like, you've got to control what's in your house.
And by the way, if you're out there and you're angry and you're never going to deal with Ramsey again because I interviewed Donald Trump, good.
Leave.
I'm fine with that.
You're narrow-minded and too stupid to talk to.
You need to learn to engage ideas and engage things that make you uncomfortable.
So, good.
If you're angry because I might talk to Vice President Harris and you're going to leave and never listen to us again, good. See you.
Wouldn't want to be you. We'll miss you. This is The Ramsey Show.
Okay, here's the hard truth. Your investment dollars could be winding up in the pockets
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Funny, they popped that picture up there. That's a great picture,
but it's one of the few times that someone's head glows
more than mine his hair just lit up under the light mine usually shines like a bulb you know
we have to put so much makeup on my head to keep it from just glistening right
and his hair is like a dadgum halo which would not be appropriate right right right
but it lights up and he had us change the lighting because it was even worse than that.
That's funny.
I like it.
It's a good shot, though.
Fun stuff.
All right, that's for those of you looking at YouTube.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Danielle's in New York City.
Hi, Danielle.
How are you?
Hey, good afternoon, Dave.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
How can we help?
Well, Dave, I'm calling you because I have a question, which is,
how do I bounce back financially and get myself ready for retirement?
Where are you bouncing back from?
Well, I had an accident in 2007, which left me disabled.
I had to learn how to walk again.
Wow.
And so finally I got to the place where I could do a part-time job because I needed the money that I was getting from Social Security disability.
And my pension was basically going towards my rent. Um,
but I started doing that and, um,
you know, hurt myself a couple of times,
wasn't able to really save up and then, uh, COVID came.
I was able to get a full-time job, but it was a temp job. So of course,
that wasn't really enough still to, you know, save anything.
Yeah.
But now I finally...
Are you single, Danielle?
Yes, I am.
Okay.
I am single.
And you're 57.
And how are you doing with the disability now?
Are you working full-time, or how are you doing?
Praise God, I am working full-time.
In fact, I just recently was hired permanently.
Good. What do you make?
My salary is $50,600.
Okay. And you live in the city, in New York City, on $50,000?
Yeah.
I didn't know you could sneeze for $50,000 in downtown New York.
Wow. Okay.
And you've got pension coming grand in downtown New York. Wow. Okay.
And you've got pension coming in in addition to that.
Are you still getting the Social Security?
Unfortunately, no.
No, once you're working.
No longer qualified for it. And they stopped my pension.
And, in fact, that's part of the debt that I owe because according to Social Security Disability, I owe them $52,000, not to mention $17,000 to IRS, $8,000.
I had credit cards, but I owe $8,000 on that.
And how much is your rent now?
Well, right now I'm living with a friend of mine uh so i'm paying 375 a month but
i am trying to get my own plate um because you know i i love my friend and i want to keep her
as a friend um but i need my own place yeah okay, okay. Yeah, you do.
Okay.
All right.
And so you've got a total of how much debt?
A total of $87,000.
Okay.
And a bunch of that is IRS and repayment to Social Security
for the time that you were working
and should not have received disability according to them, right?
Exactly.
Okay.
All right. Have you fought any of that yet? should not have received disability according to them, right? Exactly. Okay.
All right.
Have you fought any of that yet?
I talked to Social Security.
They're saying that I can possibly have a forgiving.
Yeah.
Okay. So I think we need to get someone in your corner that's used to fighting that battle
because those battles are lengthy, but they're doable. And they don't come around telling you
what all your rights are and what you can pull off there, but there's some things you can do there.
And it might even affect the IRS bill if you refiled an appeal and refiled an amended return on your tax bill.
So what I'm going to do, because this is a complicated situation, I'm going to put you with one of our Ramsey coaches, and I'm going to pay for it.
It's not going to cost you anything, and they're going to come in and look at your situation and go at some of these people
and see if we can get this $87,000 down to half of that or something by just
working the system. And then we can work through the rest of it and get it paid off and then start
building, building up some kind of a nest egg. Cause you've got to start working towards a nest
egg. Um, and you know, it's all about, uh, cost of living versus what you've got coming in and
finding those differences and being able to
push that through so uh you you've had a hard road kiddo you need somebody to love you well
and walk beside you and we're just those kind of folk so you hang on i'll have the christian pick
up and we'll get you one of our coaches as a gift from us and i think they can help you i really do
it's what they do every day they help people negotiate all kinds of debts, but when you're dealing with the IRS and Social Security, it's a different
spirit over that stuff. So yeah, different world.
Tell me about the Social Security repayment, Dave. I've never heard that before.
Well, if you continue, if you're working and you're receiving full payout on SSI, which is Social Security for Disability.
So she was declared permanently and totally disabled by the government.
Based on that, they're paying her probably $3,000, $4,000 a month, give or take.
Might be more, might be less, but somewhere right in there.
And it's not unusual.
Based on the fact that she's permanently disabled
and she qualifies to receive Social Security support instead of or is different than the retirement you get through Social Security.
But then when she went back to work, she kind of says, says, I'm really not permanently disabled anymore.
I've gotten past that.
I've worked my way through that with therapy or whatever.
I'm able to work again, but kept getting the checks okay and so that that's not okay right you can't
keep getting a check for being permanently disabled when you're no longer permanently
disabled and you've proven that by working if you had a private disability company that you
had a disability policy at your work and they were paying you and then you went
back to work they would have private investigators following you around with cameras right so that
they could not have to pay you the disability anymore do you know if you have to pay tax on
ssi benefits you do not so if you're getting four thousand bucks and that's where some of that taxes
came from so if we can reduce what's owed back to them, then that might reduce that IRS tax bill, probably.
I'm guessing.
I'm fishing around in the dark there, but I think that's what I'm hearing.
But I can also imagine if you are permanently disabled
and we know psychologically, spiritually, emotionally,
that going to rehab, doing the hard work, and getting back out there, right?
And you don't know if it's going to work.
It's good for everybody.
That's right.
Good for everybody.
But if you're getting a check for $4,000 a month, $48 a year after taxes, right?
That means you've got to be making.
You've got to go find a job that pays pretty dang well to come off even.
Yep.
That's tough.
That's a tough order, right?
Or human nature is going to say
why swim upstream yeah because you want to be well that's why i mean you have to have to be
that way but if she's making 50 grand then she took a net loss in her house after taxes yeah
living in new york city she did and i think she said they stopped her pension too early
early with release on it based on disability so like
we had a guy here years ago that was making over uh 400 and something thousand one of our top guys
uh got ms and went home out he was gone he later passed away from it at an early age but um
went out on disability and the disability people were paying him the policy we have here
maxes at 300k or used to i don't know what max is that today and so he's getting 300k man they
were following him everywhere my bet's uh trying to figure out if he was doing anything if he
lifted a shovel if he got paid for doing anything they were going to disallow that claim so you know
we were coaching him, whatever you do,
no matter how good you're feeling, don't work.
Yeah.
Because they're going to – long lens across the parking lot,
they're going to capture you doing anything.
So – and because they get defrauded.
No, I get it.
It's just one of those things that just – there's not a lot of winners there, right? Because I know they get defrauded and they want to protect their money. And they
swing the pendulum so far that you just have to be paranoid about how you live. Or you got to be
somebody like, you know, Danielle, who says, I'm going to take the net financial loss because I'm
worth some different kind of life. Yep. And I'm going to have to work extra hard because it's
going to cost me money to go get well. Well, I'll just feel better about my life when it's me. That's right. Not some
chick coming in. Good for you, Daniel. This is The Ramsey Show.
I've been doing this show for over 30 years, and some of the saddest calls I've taken are from
situations that are completely preventable. Yeah. And what's so hard is I feel like one of those,
especially the ones that I'm like, oh, it's terrible. People that call in and their spouse
has passed away suddenly and they don't have life insurance. When you have to think through,
how am I going to pay my bills? How am I going to eat next week? Yeah. In the middle of all that
grief. Like it's just, it is, it's terrible. So life insurance is the one thing, especially as a
mom with three little kids that I'm like so big on for people to get because it's inexpensive. Zander is the place that Winston and I actually get all of our life insurance is the one thing, especially as a mom with three little kids that I'm like so big on for people to get because it's inexpensive.
Zander is the place that Winston and I actually get all of our life insurance.
And it doesn't cost much because Zander shops among a gazillion different companies.
It doesn't cost much.
You just have to admit that someday you're not going to be here.
You got to say it out loud and you got to say, I'm going to say I love you to my family
by taking care of them and taking the time to put this stuff in place.
The cost of stinking pizza to get a free quote, call 800-356-4282.
That's 800-356-4282 or go to zander.com.
Thank you for joining us, America.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Kate is with us in Denver.
Hi, Kate.
How are you?
I'm good.
How are you?
Better than I deserve. What's up? So I'm kind of at a loss of what I should do. I don't really know how to handle
my emotions about my mother's bad financial choices. Okay. Why do you have emotions about your mother's financial choices?
Well, I mean, I worry about her. It's mostly anxiety and concern.
Oh, okay.
She's made some pretty bad financial choices throughout my whole life, so not new.
But, you know, she's getting a little older.
She should be getting closer to retirement,
and her latest issue is leading her to possibly cash in her 401k.
And I'm really worried for her.
And I don't really, I've asked a few friends and family about what I should do.
And I don't really know.
I've tried talking to her and it hasn't really worked out.
She doesn't seem to listen or be interested in changing.
So I just, I don't know.
I know it's not my responsibility, but I still feel that concern for her.
Sure.
I think your feelings are right.
I think it's just what you do next that's most important.
And if I was you, I'd feel bad and I'd feel scared for my mom.
And I'd also feel sad that she doesn't trust me.
And then I'd have to go do the next right thing and I wish there was some sort of secret sauce in between that you know
um there just isn't I think with family it's just it's the it's the worst man because you're you're
you know you can't win you can't lose it just kind of is sometimes and you're heartbroken and
you're sad and maybe a last
ditch effort and Dave you you may have some different thoughts but is um I love the idea
of writing letters and here's why it's something that people can go back to and sometimes when we
challenge somebody or we ask them a question they hear it through a lens of shame or frustration or
who do you think you are when you write it down they can go back to it and go back to it and go
back to it and go back to it and go back to it and go back to it.
And that's, I mean, you're throwing spaghetti at the wall
because nothing else has worked,
but that might work and just let her know,
I love you and if you ever want to talk about money,
I know that it's scary.
If you ever want to talk about it,
I've learned some things along the way
and you've helped me so much
and I'd love to help you with this
if you ever want to talk.
Yeah.
And then you got to dust your sandals off
and go on to the next thing because life's too short.
You can't do anything about it.
I've only seen a couple of things that have any success at all,
and it has to do with the person you're talking to, not with you.
But I know what doesn't work.
What doesn't work is you sitting down and saying,
Hey, Mom, you suck at this, and I'm going to show you what to do right.
That's not going to work at all because you've
got the powdered butt syndrome. Once someone's powdered your butt, they don't want your opinion
on money or sex. Okay. So I don't care if you got a master's degree in finance, you know,
the one person is not going to listen to you is your parents. So a disturbing number of people
in my family do nothing I teach. And I've got two PhDs.
You know how many questions I've ever received about marital advice?
Zero.
Any of those subjects, yeah.
Zero.
Zero.
That's what you run into.
Now, what has worked is the same thing as sharing your faith.
You can sit down with someone and tell your story.
Say, Mom, here's where I was broken.
Here's where I was scared.
Here's where I was ashamed.
Here's where I was running backward with money.
Here's mistakes I made with money.
And I stopped doing that.
And instead I did this.
And when I got on a budget and I worked at that snowball, I paid off $57,000 worth of
debt in 18 months.
And I know you're proud of me for doing that.
And I just want to tell you, it's an amazing sense now that I've got a power over this and I didn't used to.
That's your story.
And no one really gets upset hardly with you telling your story, even your mother.
And sometimes we're doing that with the hope that she will say something like,
wow, I wish I could do that. Well, she just opened the door. Or man, I could never do that. Yeah,
you could. She just opened the door, right? And so we're trying to get her to ask you a question
or make a comment that gives you an entree into the living room of her mind. The second one that has worked is if you have a family member or close family friend that
is respected by her that is very good with money, she might listen to them a whole lot
easier than she will you.
That make sense?
Yeah, that's really good advice, actually, because there are actually a few accountants
in my family um
that i think she might listen to a little bit more it's more of like a fundamental difference
of opinion yeah as she's no it's not it's not very much it's not a fundamental difference of
opinion she sucks at handling money yeah it's not it's not a difference of opinion she's just wrong
yeah and what we've got to do is get she's got bad information and she's acting on it
yeah it's not like i'd rather be happy now than plan for the now that's that that's just that's
a four-year-old yeah yeah you know i'd rather be happy now than plan for the future has not
worked well and she's not happy she's she's using that as an excuse to buy crap she can't afford
with money she doesn't have to impress people she doesn't even really like and she's going to retire
broke now she's painted herself into a corner is cashing out a 401k so her system sucks her belief
system sucks so for her sake if anybody could inject a new set of software into that brain
to where she started looking at this differently whether it's an uncle or an aunt or your story opens up a thought
pattern for her or maybe the maybe the desperation of now she's looking at I'm going to have
to retire and eat Alpo.
Something opens her up to be able to talk.
Then that's the best thing that can happen to her, because I mean, why did I go broke?
Because I was stupid.
The stuff I was doing was freaking brain damaged,
and that's what made me go broke.
So, I mean, I got a PhD in DUMB.
I know exactly what it looks like,
and that wasn't a difference in opinion.
It was stupid versus smart.
That's not a difference in opinion.
That's just right and wrong, evil and good.
And so, yeah, there is truth in this world the law of gravity
works for everyone you know so yeah but yeah i think you keep inserting yourself and um
the other thing is is i i um i think you can push right up into the edge of this as long as she
feels how much you love her while you're doing this but you can't right up into the edge of this as long as she feels how much you love her while you're doing this.
But you can't smack somebody in the back of their head unless you got your arm around their shoulder first.
You got to have a quality relationship.
Here's a heavy other side.
We talk about your emotions feeling out of control.
Often they are feeling out of control and we cast that on somebody else.
So you think you're emotional about your mom's expenditures
or the way she's living.
I bet if you spent some time with it,
you're actually emotional about what this is going to mean for you later.
You're going to be faced with, am I going to pay for mom?
Am I going to take care of mom?
Am I going to let my mom eat out?
So you're casting it on her right now because you're watching it,
but really your body knows this is going to be in your lap in five years 10 years 15 20 years so i think a
lot of the emotional exercise that you can do the only thing you can control here is go ahead now
and make some boundaries about what this is going to mean 20 years from now are you going to pay for
it are you just going to start putting a put a sinking fund away to take care of mom one day or
i'm not going to do this i'm going to make peace with it i'm going to end for it? Are you just going to start putting a sinking fund away to take care of mom one day? Or I'm not going to do this.
I'm going to make peace with it.
I'm going to end it.
But you can decide what your boundaries are going to be and think about that stuff into the future and begin to control that because that's really all the control you got.
Yep.
Absolutely.
Good question, Kate.
And a lot of people in America are facing those exact same emotions with their parents and or their grown kids.
Some of you are what we call the sandwich generation you're getting squeezed by broke parents and broke
grown kids and you're squeezed right in the middle and all the baloney is coming out with
the squeezing i can tell you that so i thought you said deloney for a second no good just below
i said baloney i'm careful to enunciate that word around you all right good because you have
a you have a you have a serious psychological work hearing from my feelings you have a wound around that
and it triggers you i know right so hey the best way to make the most of your money is by creating
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day doing an EveryDollar webinar. Are you in Georgia? What was it? It was me and Chris Campbell.
Yeah, it's just amazing watching people walk through that thing and there was the number of people who jumped in who were
baby step seveners who were buying it for offering to buy it for the people who are just over their
head and wondering what i can't breathe what i do next generous people sitting in the webinar and
pretty amazing that was cool it was i've never seen that never heard of that but it was pretty
rad pretty rad that's neat but it's folks who have been through it they use it and they realize oh this was a path to freedom for my family i'd love to pass
this thing on yeah pretty cool man neat this is the ramsey show a lot of financial institutions
don't care too much about you but they care a lot about getting their sweaty hands on your money
they have fancy furniture and marble columns in their lobbies
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But Fairwinds Credit Union is different.
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That's F-A-I-R-W-I-N-D-S dot org slash Ramsey.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host, Dr. John Deloney.
Ramsey Personality is my co-host today.
Thanks for joining us.
If you haven't heard, the Ramsey Network app is where you get the last segment of the show every day.
We moved it onto the Ramsey Network app.
You can download the app for free.
We've got all kinds of other stuff on the Ramsey Network app.
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And it's where the Trump interview will hit first on Tuesday.
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But if you want to download that, one of the things you can do
on the Ramsey Network app is ask a question.
This one comes from
Candace.
We aren't high income earners
but managed to set up a college fund for our daughter
from an inheritance we received 15 years ago college fund has enough to attend her number
one school and pay cash however she has a full tuition scholarship to a different state school
that will provide a good education but she still wants to go to her first choice school do we
encourage her to go the cheaper school and save forty thousand dollars or her dream school i don't
know what school is going to only cost $40,000, maybe a year,
maybe a year. So I was just pulling up some data here. So by the way, John has a PhD in higher
education. So I'll let you, I'll let you wade in on this. It's been a few years. So ultimately
here's, here's kind of the breakdown. There is a, what they would call an earnings premium by
selective institution, but here's, you got to drill into what it means what does that mean if you go to a fancier school you do there is some data that
says you come out with a higher salary but what they don't tell you is those fancier schools
self-select so if your kid is earned a full ride then her test scores are good. She is a hard worker. And what they say is that premium dissolves when you factor in test scores, grit, and all these other things.
So meaning if you select thoroughbreds only for your school, of course your school.
That's exactly right.
Because of who you selected.
That's right.
It's a preselection.
Because the thoroughbred can run fast no matter which school they went to.
That's right. So ultimately, I think if you look at it all across the board,
what a premium school, however you want to call that,
is there may be a premium classmate selection,
meaning you're more likely to sit by Elon Musk,
who's going to start a company, and they're going to call you
because they're friends and you all room together.
Whereas if you go to a state school that might not the chance of that happening you might have less thoroughbreds everywhere there might be a few thoroughbreds in here and there
all i have to say is this um if you've got cash i if it's a if it's an incredible institution
yada yada i don't have a problem with it what i do have a problem with is a 18-year-old saying, this is my dream, and you spending money on that.
Thank you.
If your kid gets into Yale and you want to say,
okay, Yale's got a premium,
they got the best architecture program in the world,
I'm all about that.
If your kid says, I felt at home at this place,
and it made me feel warm and fuzzy, it's my dream,
and this other school is saying, you can come here for free,
my kid in my house is going
to go to the school that's there for free yeah and so i'm not going to be drug around by my kids
quote unquote dreams um yeah i think you need to continue to have a conversation with them about
what they're getting for what you're spending that's that's a great and if they cannot have
that conversation logically i'm going to override them that's called parenting
but um because it's my freaking money by the way i'm not yours so um we're going to talk about that
so you can come out this way and buy a house right after you graduate with the money we had
saved for college and i love that that to me is a really compelling educational expenses and housing coming out of
school. Those are the two things that'll make it tough for a new grad. We can take that off the
table. We all went to the University of Tennessee and the Ramsey kids were required to go to the
University of Tennessee, but for lots of reasons, but I'm kidding. Not really, but yeah, not much.
But anyway, one child who might be named something that sounds like rachel actually applied to an out-of-state southeastern conference college which shall go unnamed
which was fourteen thousand dollars more a year to go to basically the same level of education
maybe even less for fourteen thousand dollars more simply because it went across the state line.
Can we click on that real quick?
And I just said, I'm your father.
Not paying?
No, I'm not paying for it.
So there is actually a move where public state schools,
because their tuition in state is often capped
or they have to go through the legislature.
So they have a premium on out-of-state students
that they can charge for the same seat.
Because you're not a citizen of this state, I can charge you an out-of-state tuition fee.
And there's actual recruiting efforts to go get those kids as though their experience would be so radically different.
But they go after your 18-year-old saying, I know you are next to UT Knoxville, but if you just cross the state and look at our state school yep madness one of the
worst ones was I talked to a girl here on the air one day who was in South Carolina and I said won't
you go South Carolina she said no I want to go to Mississippi I said why do you want to go to
Mississippi there's South Carolina's a good school Mississippi is a good school they're both
southeastern conference university state universities I mean it's a I mean fairly
close baseline we could argue about sure little stuff but I mean I'm's a fairly close baseline. We could argue about little stuff.
But I mean, I'm like, why?
What is it that's drawing?
It's my dream.
Why is it your dream?
Same kind of crap, right?
And finally, I'm like, what?
She said, the houses in Oxford are so beautiful.
This is why you're going to spend 14 grand extra,
to look at other people's houses for four years.
So I'm just like, where's your parents?
Someone needs to take your little self and say no.
No little self.
You can't do that little self.
Bad plan little self.
So I mean, to answer this, if my kid comes to me and says, Dad, I got accepted to Stanford.
I want to study computer science and whatever.
And I have the money saved up to send my kid to Stanford, and he can articulate here.
I don't have a problem with that at all. Not all day, every day. Exactly.
But if he says, Dad, I want to go to University of North Carolina, and I live in Tennessee,
and he got accepted to UT Knoxville, I can't do the math there. It's illogical, right?
I mean, if you're going to study marketing and logistics, or let's just say supply chain,
which the University of Tennessee has one of the top schools in the nation.
University of Michigan is one of the other ones, okay, on supply chain.
If you're going to study supply chain, you're going to come out of University of Tennessee
making probably right at $100,000 right now with that degree.
If you want to go to Vanderbilt and study the same thing, you're going to get a substandard
education at Vanderbilt on that particular subject.
Sure, yeah.
And you're going to pay $75,000 a year instead of $12,000 a year.
Now, that's stupid.
Right.
To say that you went to Vanderbilt because my upper lip is sunburned because I went to Vanderbilt and my nose is in the air.
You know, that's just bull crap.
That's just stupid.
Okay.
And there's, I'm not against Vanderbilt other than their football, which they don't play
well, but, but the, I mean, I, I, there's, I've got a niece that graduated from Vanderbilt.
She had a free ride there.
Yes.
And then went on to be a lawyer and as a partner in a law firm, you know, and so great.
That's awesome.
No problem with that but don't go there you know and and you
know kick in your false falsetta right accent as you're doing it because i'm gonna kill you i'm
gonna write you up because i mean i went to university of tennessee and people that work
for went to vanderbilt work for me so i know it's not necessarily better all the time okay so that
that you gotta think this stuff through logically You have to put some critical thinking to it. A, can you pay for it?
If you can't pay for it, it's off the table.
B, what's the opportunity cost on this money?
What could she buy if she goes to this other school?
And then what's the benefit if she goes to the famous school, the dream school, so to
speak.
But yeah, be careful with that word dream because that may mean my boyfriend's going
there.
That's that was. Yes. Yes. I'll just my boyfriend's going there. That was, yes.
Yes, I'll just leave it at that.
You're correct, sir.
And there's a 100% chance of breaking up with that boyfriend.
Just like right at 100.
It's like 90 something.
The statistical evidence is really bad.
So I'm kidding, but not much.
So yeah, be careful if you're following your love around,
and it's costing you $20,000 a year, okay?
That's a bad plan.
You can buy a lot of airline tickets for that crap.
So think this stuff through.
Moms and dads, get involved.
It is your job to keep your kid from doing something that's going to cost them a decade of their life.
And by the way, I have a freshman in high school.
It starts now.
I'm shocked by it, but it starts now.
And so that means the conversations around your dinner table have to start now.
I started when they were six because we taught them to sing Rocky Top.
Just depends on how early you want to brainwash or indoctrinate or manipulate or teach.
Whatever you want to call it, John.
Just whatever you want to call it here.
What's that great? There's a great homer simpson quote that says the best part about
being a parent is you get to teach them to hate the things that you hate
oh that's alabama okay now
did you know half of your listening audience just like like almost like like subconsciously just
shouted out roll
tight they couldn't help it just came out of their armpits a visceral response well it's
gonna be a great football game this saturday i can tell you that uh this is the ramsey show
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From the Ramsey Network, it's the Ramsey Show. I'm Jade Warshaw. Your host next to me is Dr.
John Deloney. We're going to take calls about your life and your money. We're going to help you build a life that
you love. We're going to help you build wealth. We're going to help you with your careers and
your relationships. It is a live show, so you can give us a call. The number is 888-825-5225,
and we'll get you in on the line. All right, John, you ready to get into it? Let's go. All right. Kristen
is in San Antonio, Texas. What's up, Kristen? Hello. What's up? Yes. So my question for you,
I'll get right to it, is my husband and I did a boo-boo. Whoa, it's not that kind of show what'd y'all do kristen well financially all right um so we had
a high amount of debt and we had the brilliant idea prior to hearing about dave ramsey of course
to do one of those lovely uh debt consolidation companies that basically, you know, we pay into, I mean, into it,
and then they negotiate, I guess, the pot that we have contributed to.
And now we know Dave Ramsey, and it's an uh-oh, we shouldn't have done that, but
we're not sure what we should do. We have $3,000 put in the pot already.
What's the total debt that you've consolidated?
$37,000.
Okay.
So they're saying they set up a payment plan for you
where you pay X amount a month, right?
Yeah.
How much do you pay?
And it's a lot of our income.
$831 a month. Okay. And what is your income every month? Well, I am self-employed, so it's kind of iffy, but we go about, I would say about
$6,000. Okay. And so your thought is like, all right, how do I get out of this? Because you're also paying them something, right?
Oh, yes.
How much of this goes to them?
So basically the last time I talked to them, they basically said we have about $3,200 in the pool, I guess you can say.
And after three months, we still haven't heard anything
as far as them negotiating yet. But we're also working on our debts, other debts, just small
things that we are doing the debt small ball to and have a budget and we're sticking to it.
Okay.
But we're also house poor. So that takes a lot
of our income as well. What percentage is it on your mortgage? 40%. Okay. Okay. It could be worse,
but that's pretty tough right there. 40%. You're feeling that in a major way
and you've got this consolidation in a situation where you're not really able to control it.
What happens if you don't pay what you've said you will pay?
You know, I'm what I have all I've I should have asked them that question.
But my the only thing they said is if you do decide to walk away, you will get your money back.
OK. OK. OK. So they're they're pooling the money. thing they said is if you do decide to walk away you will get your money back okay okay okay so
they're they're pooling the money they haven't actually put it towards any of the debt yet
correct and and it's we're kind of deciding okay do we do we just keep the money in there and keep
on pooling no no no something so jade jade kristen i'm going to ask jade this question because she
knows more about this than I do,
but my understanding about most of these companies
is they will hold your money,
they wait until you default,
so they're crashing your car for you,
and then the credit card companies will sue you
or who you owe money will sue,
and then they will take the money
that you put in that pot
and use that to say, what if we wrote you
a check for $3,000 today?
But you're the casualty.
You get what I'm saying?
Yes.
And so they come off looking like the hero, but they crash your
car and then using your money
instead of paying the payments that would have kept
your car from being crashed, then they come out
and be like, look at what we did for you.
But you're on the side of the road with no car and everything's in ash that yeah that's 100 because
we have so we don't have enough to pay like all there are three separate credit cards okay so
that's all this 37 000 is that's what the 37 000 is is three separate credit cards yes okay um here
here if i'm in your shoes if I wake up in your shoes,
I'm trying to get out of this because in this situation, you want to have control. And I feel
like right now you don't have the control that would probably give you more peace.
There's two like big red blinking lights here. That's one big red blinking light is
you can do that for yourself. Like if you said to yourself,
I'm just going to crash my credit and then I'm going to do this. You could do that for yourself
and still be in control of it. I don't think it's to that point. I don't think you do have to
default. I think you can just pay these people above what you owe them and pay it off relatively
quickly. You make seven, you, you net $72,000 a year. Um, so I can, I think you can make this
happen. And you, you mentioned that you have a side business
or your own business, which also lets me know there's no ceiling to what you could be earning.
There's a way for you to increase your income. Am I right?
Yes. And I work every single day.
Excellent. Excellent. So if I'm you coming away from this call, I'm going to,
if they said, hey, if you walk away from this, you get your money back. I'm going to go back and say, I, I don't want to do this. And I'm going to try to get out of it.
Um, if, if they give you some sort of runaround or there's some fee on the backend, call us back.
We'll help you with it. Um, the house is the other big glaring light. It's 40% of your income.
How long have you been in this house? Only a year and a half. Okay. And did you get in at 40% of your income or did
something happen and your income plummeted or the payment went up? What happened? Income plummeted.
My husband and I moved from a different city and we had to find a place to live. Um, and that was
the one available and we're like, okay can do this and then they stopped his overtime
that's tough um i don't see a pathway for you to clear this debt in the in a way that makes sense
and keep this house um do you i i really don't i, we're working as much as we can.
We're budgeting what we can.
I mean, but it's just not making a good dent.
You know what I mean?
There's not much margin left over.
Yeah, it's that classic hole-to-shovel ratio.
And what makes us move faster is that bigger shovel, right?
Because I'm guessing you're at a beer buns budget.
Yes. And then we have about 40, no, 60 in equity, obviously. So we basically break even and I guess we could rent,
but man, it's hard to, we have two girls. How old are you, are you kristen i am 43 okay if you were my sister
i would tell you to do that exact thing okay and here's why i would want that break even
what it like mathematically it feels like oh my gosh we're just at zero um but that zeroing out is i want you to think of it as
like a set of chain cutters and you just cut a chain so you yeah you're right you don't have
you don't have anything but nobody's got you right do you know what i'm saying and that in your home
is a different kind of piece than what you're living with right now.
Yeah, I'm with John.
I would get out of this home because not for many reasons.
A, you just even if you called in here and everything was great, you didn't have any debt.
But if it was 40 percent of your income, that is bondage.
That is a burden.
That is not a blessing that a home should be.
And even if you were debt free, having a mortgage that's 40% would make it tough to get where you need to be financially
and accomplish your other goals. This is The Ramsey Show.
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All right, you're listening to The Ramsey Show. I'm Jade Warshaw. Next to me, Dr. John Deloney.
We're taking your calls. If you want to get in, it's a live show. You can get in where you fit in.
888-825-5225 is the number. You can call about anything pertaining to your life and your money,
and we will hook you up with the best possible advice that we can come up with.
John and I just pool our resources and come up with the best possible solution.
I'm definitely the shallow end of that pool.
It's fun. We have a good time. Michelle's in Buffalo, New York. What's going on, Michelle?
Yes. Hi. I just wanted to say before I ask my question, we're debt-free!
I'm so excited. That's awesome. How much did you
pay off? Oh gosh, let me think. I think it was
close to almost $30,000, maybe $40,000.
It was just a couple cards and a couple credit cards
and I just went after it. Well, we went after it. How long did it
take you? Yeah.
Since 2021, so roughly like three years.
Yeah, three years.
Very cool.
Hey, real quick, Michelle.
Unfortunately, Jade and I have been repeatedly told you can't pay off debts in New York.
It's too expensive.
Yeah, it's just impossible to do.
Are you sure you did the math right?
I know. Right. Um, it was hustle. Um, especially this summer I was working six days a week.
I was working anywhere from, you know, eight, nine hours. Um, I just didn't stop. Um, my husband,
of course was working full time as well. Uh, well we went without a lot not a lot of going
out to dinner not a lot of clothes shopping just the necessities you know what we actually needed
looking at home you know the typical stuff that you guys talk about and just just doing it listen
here we here it is again the dream is free the hustle is sold separately we've been trying to
tell people that and you did the hustle and so you got the dream. I'm proud of you. Really excited. How
can we help you today? My biggest question now that I'm on baby step number three, my house,
I have about seven and a half years left to pay on my house. It's roughly about $95,000.
And my daughter will be graduating high school in about five years, or well,
graduating from high school in about five years. So I'm trying to figure out what the best
choice is, because I know if I hustle again, I could pay this house off in about two years.
But yeah, five years is looming over me. And I want to make, you know, a decent dent for her
so that she doesn't have to
have any school loans at all. So you're saying if I go hard in the paint for two to three years,
I don't put anything aside in a 529. I can have this house paid off. Yeah, I wouldn't do that.
I wouldn't because there's a reason that these baby steps are in order and that's ultimately
to serve you best, right right some people don't have somebody
that they're going to have to put through college and so yeah they could skip forward but in your
case i mean you set it out of your own mouth you want her to be able to go through college
without taking out the loans um and so you will be set up the plan allows you a position to be
able to do that right first we're going to get six three three let's say three months put aside
for you maybe it's six months you get to decide that you'll start investing 15 into your
retirement because you're putting your mask on first and then you get to say all right what can
i afford to put aside for her uh while i'm still affording to do my 15 and then you might decide
what that number is and another thing that's really going to inform this is what school you
guys decide on.
Because that, John, school choice is everything.
Choosing a place you can afford.
Where does she want to go to school?
Please say she doesn't know because she's only in eighth grade.
Well, yes, but we actually have been talking about it.
And we have been talking about state school.
So roughly, you know, one state school is roughly in full.
I think it was like close to 60,000 for the four years.
Um, and the other one was just about half.
It was actually a lot cheaper.
So it kind of depends on what she wants to go for.
Yeah.
Listen, I just want to remind you that paying off the mortgage is super important.
I want you to do that.
I want you to accomplish that.
You will accomplish that, but there is not a mad rush to the finish line on that. Baby steps one through three, you are biting ankles to get,
you know what I'm saying, past that finish line. But for the other baby steps, it's not like that.
You don't have to go to those extents. Like you said, you've got seven years left in a normal
frame. You've got seven years before this house is paid
off. I think that's pretty freaking awesome. And so you don't have to crush yourself and you don't
have to put your daughter's paid for education at risk in order to make that happen faster.
Here, John and I say that that is not part of the plan. It is not a requirement for you. And I
wouldn't do it. I would put that money aside. I would take care of a baby girl.
And then you will be living in a paid for house shortly after that.
And it's not going to take you seven years.
You know that.
Yeah.
There's no way.
Yeah.
No kidding.
No kidding.
That's why I'm so eager to get it done because I'm so close.
I know.
So in the same way that Jade and I are often arguing with people, probably unsuccessfully, that I don't care about the interest rates.
Like that this is a psychology game and just trust us, just pay this off.
It works for millions of people.
The same principle applies here and that's this.
I get that you have a math problem and you've got a set of you got an energy right now about you we've just done this so long that if you try to baby step to your house with just maniacal
intensity what we see is people burn out and they just say screw it yeah and so i i don't see it
jade and i can talk to you to her blue in the face. And I'm going to tell you, I go over the top on a mortgage, right?
I go over the top on it.
And I still can't treat it like baby step two because then my house isn't a house we're living in.
See what I'm saying?
Yeah.
That makes sense.
I think your next psychological move is to practice slowing down just a wee bit.
And not and realizing you're not losing the momentum. You're not losing anything. You're
just now you're starting to settle into this thing. It's like when you're in a race car and
you hit the gas real hard for that first, you lose your breath and then your body catches up
and now you're cruising. That's where you're at now. You're still going real, real, real fast.
It's just you're not running for your life. Yeah. And if you really do think about like numbers and opportunity costs on this, let me
try to play this out outside of my own brain. If you said, okay, instead of, let's play it the way
you thought you wanted to play it. I'm going to go balls to the wall paying off this mortgage,
and I'm going to have it done in two years. Well, if you did that, then suddenly you don't have
enough money to pay for baby girls college outright. So the next thing you do, you're looking for student loans
and the interest on that is going to be worse than what you would have. Do you know what I'm
saying? Like if you really are looking at the numbers on it, I'm like, there's no way in the
world I'd want to set myself up for the interest on a student loan payment in order to pay off my
house a little bit faster. Because
some of those loans, you're at 8%. You know what I mean? So I definitely, for many reasons,
but that's just another reason that came to my head. If you're a person who's really like playing
a shell game here, which I don't think you are, I just think that you're excited about your house.
I don't think this is a numbers thing for you as much as it is as a I just want to be free
I want to be done with it and I can relate to that 100% so yeah yeah just keep keep on trucking I
think what John said is right you're going to be done in less than seven years I think you're done
four years and I think you've got a chunk thrown away for your daughter's college and then I think
you can help cash flow and y'all can work together on cash
flow and the rest of it.
That's what they can happen.
I like that.
I like it.
I like it.
Thank you.
Thanks for the call.
Can I just tell you we're proud of you?
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
That's amazing.
It's amazing,
amazing,
amazing,
amazing.
Good for you.
Very,
very good.
All right,
John,
we have the Ramsey network app.
If you don't know about it,
you can go over there to listen to the final hour of the show.
But you guys also are able to turn in questions over there.
And so we have one.
This person says, we aren't high income earners, but managed to set up a college fund for our
daughter from an inheritance that she received 15 years ago.
The college fund has enough to attend her one school and pay cash.
However, she has a full scholarship
to a different state school
that will provide a good education,
but she still wants to go to her first school choice.
Do we encourage her to go to the cheaper school
and save 40,000 or her dream school?
Thoughts?
Yeah, Dave and I were talking about this
in a previous hour.
Yeah, it's a long, complicated thing,
but at the end of the day I'm not ever
going to fund an 18 year old's
quote unquote dream
I want to know if you have the money to pay
for an elite school and there's a reason
to go to this elite school
my kid wants to go be
a social media
guy
we're coming up on the break here's this
if you have the money to pay for it and there's a reason to go to that school
and it's thought through, great. Otherwise, go to the free school and help your kid put a down
payment on the house when they graduate. Love it. This is The Ramsey Show.
Hey, guys. Rachel Cruz here. You know, some people think budgeting means they can't have
any fun with money. And I know this because that was me.
But the truth is, budgeting doesn't limit your freedom.
It actually gives you freedom.
A budget is simply telling your money where to go.
And the best way to do this is with EveryDollar, my favorite budgeting app.
It'll help you create a plan for your money that fits your lifestyle.
So whether it's a spontaneous date night or an epic Disney cruise,
budget for some fun.
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What's going on? You're listening to The Ramsey Show.
I'm Jade. Next to me is Dr. John Deloney.
And today's question of the day is brought to you by YRefi.
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Today's question comes from Jill in Michigan.
She writes,
We have two children and I work full time to bring home about $4,000 a month plus some random bonuses.
My husband only earns an average of $600 a month from his commission only job.
Together, this is not enough to pay our bills, much less our debt.
We've already cut spending,
but we have a $900 a month debt payment
that he didn't tell me about
until he was in over his head.
All of this is wrecking our marriage
and I'm trying so hard not to be resentful.
How do I get him to see that I'm not meant
to carry all this on my own?
He's supposed to be the biblical head of our family.
What do you think,ade oh gosh my husband only earns an average of six hundred dollars a month that's that's the problem beyond anything else like it's not even a thing of um
biblical head of house you know what i mean like yeah i'm just like if he was single
he couldn't live on that right so it's just not like right now looking numbers wise i'm going
numbers wise there's an income problem period um no matter who brings the money in by the way he or
she uh it's a numbers issue there um but then there is obviously a relational issue because she's viewing him in a
light and in a gender role.
Um,
and he clearly doesn't see it that way.
Well,
it's a respect issue.
Like she doesn't respect the guy.
And I think you're right.
I think it's less about the role and as much as our family's struggling and
you don't care that our family's struggling.
And that could be a dad not helping change diapers at night that could be a dad yeah i think my 14 year old makes 600 a month so i i
don't know how this works out this way yeah but to me this is somebody who is um lost respect in a
man who's going to watch his family drown and just be sitting sitting on his couch not making any
money and so then you start coming
up with stories and ideas and you got to be doing this and you should be doing this yeah that's
somebody who's desperate saying you're watching your wife and your kids suffer and you're not
doing anything about it okay then tell i agree with you tell me this because i can't begin to
get into the the mind of a male you know i'm I'm a woman. It's a very simple, simple, simple box.
You're like, it's, it's, it's a.
Not a lot going on up there.
So you said it, not me.
What happened?
What has to be going on with a guy to sit and watch this happen?
Because my brain goes to, wow, my dude must be down in the dump.
Like something's got to be going on that you would be able to watch that and
feel either helpless to do anything about it or ostrich syndrome something's going on that he's
just not dialed in yeah i mean i don't know i don't know if it's a matter of shame i don't know
if it's a matter of um like a delusional guy i don't know if he if there's more to this story
that he also is drinking he has gambling issues what's the 900 a month debt right or if he's playing video games with his
buddies i don't know underneath all of that so i think the generous thing we can say is he started
a commission-only job and it hadn't worked out and move on he is really struggling with depression
he is he is ashamed to look at himself in the mirror and it's hard to shift out of that okay that's the
that's the generous the ungenerous is he is a spoiled brat man child and jill's been his mom
way more than she's been his wife and he's beat down she's beat down and here's the deal at the
end of the day and i'm going to say this um and not unapologetically, this family is not, they're not, I don't care. You have to
get up and help your family. There's just a, there's a period to it, right? So you can go
get some counseling. You can go get some support. You can go get some care. Your family's drowning.
You got to quit this commission only job. You can go make more money than this by a long shot. You
can four or five x this at
mcdonald's right yes and so that's why i said he must be somewhere deep and dark if you or delusional
or delusional or delusional and i've met those dudes who are like no bro i got a plan i got this
thing and and so they're always scheming always whatever so there's a lot more to this and let's
just let's just go ahead and be fair across the board. It may have been, he may have realized after two kids
and Jill's hard on him that he lives in a failure factory.
I can't please you.
I can't do anything.
I'm just going to, here's the deal.
None of that matters.
Your kids are struggling.
Your spouse is struggling.
You got to go make some more money.
And I love how you said it.
You couldn't support yourself on this much money.
No.
At least carry carry yourself right so all that to
say is um there's a time to mourn there's a time to grieve and there's a time to struggle struggle
struggle i'm with you and you gotta go you gotta go figure this out okay so we've talked about this
from the point of view of what he needs to do she's the one who wrote the letter how do i get him to see
that i'm not meant to carry this alone you don't you can't um i think she has to she has to i mean
going back to if it's generous if he's really struggling right um hey honey i'm gonna go see
a counselor and i'd love for you to join me like i'm gonna be a part of your healing process because
i know you're not well and i see a light on the other end of this thing. If he's a man child who's gambling too much or
drinking too much, playing video games too much or whatever. Yeah. Because $900 a month, that's
like a 30 or $40,000 bill somewhere. At least. Yeah. That's a chunk. Right. So she has to do
the next right thing, which is make sure my children are safe. Yeah. Right. And so I've
got to start creating a world where we are okay. And that's where I've
got to start doing my four wall stuff. Right. And sometimes you can do that inside of a house.
Sometimes you got to leave a marriage because this goes back to that fidelity thing. I think
we think about fidelity is off always about like romantic cheating. I think fidelity is a way
bigger thing than that. I agree. I agree. You can cheat on your spouse at a golf course you can cheat on you cannot be a person of fidelity integrity by not working by
just laying around playing video games right that is me not being committed to this i'm choosing
somebody else or something else over you that's right yes fidelity so all i have to say is she's
got to be honest about he's not coming around he has no interest in us he'd rather drink he'd
rather gamble he'd rather do their stuff so i have to do the next right hard scary thing which is i
got to protect me and my kids and that stinks and that's hard and nobody wants to go down that road
so she needs to go get with a professional in her local area and begin to map out what that looks
like i hate that that's tough my hope is he's a man who's stuck and he's not doing well. And her choosing to not beat him up and not choose to disrespect him,
but choose to walk alongside him and say,
hey, I'm willing to go help you get well if you are.
That's my hope and dream about this.
But there's just a lot of unknowns here.
There's a lot of unknowns.
And I think that's the hardest part about anything is she can't,
she's not going to be able to make him do anything.
And as long as that's the focus, we're just stuck stuck and nobody's ever been truly deeply shamed into behavior change no ever
um might last for a second and all that's not changed behavior that is i will do what i need
to do to get you away from me right in fact it's a further repellent so the only thing i've ever
seen here is is a double down on connection, which is hard when you have no relational capital left or somebody choosing to say, I got to take care of us.
I got to take care of us.
Wow.
That's a tough situation.
Very, very, very tough.
Yeah.
Well, we're hoping for you.
By the way, BetterHelp is a place that we recommend if you are looking for counseling, you could check out there and try to get some of the help that you need.
Because I do think in situations like this,
it's really important to get like an outsider to kind of just have their opinion, right?
You get so close to it and you're looking at it and you're so close to the situation,
it's hard to see it for all the facets that it has.
That's exactly right.
Call our friends at BetterHelp if you've got nobody else.
I mean, if you have somebody else, call our friends at BetterHelp,
but that's a great place to start.
And they can see within 24, 48 hours.
And they can get you cracking on getting well.
Oh, wee.
My goodness gracious.
That is tough stuff.
Well, in the meantime, I can tell you guys that let's switch gears here a little bit, John.
And tell people that time is running out to book their cabin.
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All right, you're listening to The Ramsey Show. Thanks for hanging out with us. This is a live show about your life, your money. If you ever had a question or you're just wondering, you can give
us a call. The number is 888-825-5225. Christian will pick up the line, screen your call, make
sure you're not some kind of a psychopath, and we'll take your call. It'll be really fun.
We'll probably take that call. It'll be really fun.
We'll probably take that call, too.
Yeah, we will.
It's okay.
Everybody's welcome here.
If George can work here, we'll probably take your call.
That is correct.
All right.
Jessica is on the line.
She is none of the things that we just described.
She is just fine.
What's going on, Jessica?
Well, thank you.
Yeah, I'm really excited to talk this through with y'all.
So we are in baby step one. After my gig shift this tonight, I'll have 700, me and my husband.
Oh, yeah. But I know it's really exciting. But baby step two is getting me a little worried.
Um, my my husband took out student student loans and that was something that was like
his domain. So I wasn't aware of how much he owed. Besides, before the student loans, we owe about
$40,000 in various debts. But last week he told me that he owes $35,000 for student loans. And I
really understood what y'all mean by you can't breathe.
Wow. It was just, which is, it's, it's fine. Just, I want to know how to proceed. Um, cause there's nine different loans. Some are subsidized, some are unsubsidized and there's different
payback plans, but there's also a disclaimer that the income driven repayment plans might not
be an option.
I'm just so confused.
I don't know anything about all this.
Jay's going to walk you through all this.
Can I just tell you to do one thing?
It's not a pet peeve of mine, but it's just like a thing that happens.
I just want to free you from it, okay?
This is not fine.
And I think you have a habit of feeling something
and then immediately putting a lid over it
because somewhere along the way it was your job to make sure everybody else was okay in your world
and you're not allowed to be mad at your husband you're not allowed to be mad you okay like I feel
it and then then I cover it up it's not okay this sucks it's scary okay and you're allowed to be mad
and you're allowed to be frustrated with your husband for not fully disclosing all this stuff.
You'll probably need to have that conversation.
But I want you to be able to feel your feelings,
because that's going to be some of the gas on this fire
that's going to get you out of this mess, okay?
How long have you been married?
Five years.
Okay.
And are the student loans from before,
or it kind of sounded like he just took these out?
No, we met in college, and i knew that he was taking out loans but he he really didn't know how much and he just
kind of signed the paper and you know that's what i did yeah so you're just like in shock because
you're like i thought we had one amount and it's double what basically what i thought yes that's
exactly it yeah oh yeah okay Listen, that deserves an argument.
It does.
I give you permission to fight a little bit about that.
Anyway, listen, let me go back on that because, John, you're right.
Like, these are real things and you have to kind of get it out in the open and like sift through it as a couple.
Yeah, and when you say like, I can't breathe, but it's okay.
And it's not okay.
It's not okay.
And drop your shoulders there.
You're not a bad wife.
You're not a bad partner you're not you're not disrespect like man i wish you had
to sign those papers and here we are so we'll solve it but when you just put a lid on everything
here's the promise in counseling we call it leakage it will find a way out and usually it's
at a real inopportune time it's at an in-law's house like after dinner it'll come out so you get in the habit of saying no i'm
allowed to feel my feelings i don't i don't get to treat you bad i don't get to be disrespectful
but i i'm allowed to feel disgusted i'm allowed to feel scared to death i'm allowed to feel angry
and then we're going to be about solving this problem is that fair yeah totally all right
you're worth all that so good all right so uh you're on Baby Step One, got the $700. Life is good. Listen, you've been
given a little bit of a, you didn't know that money was there, but it doesn't change the plan
and it doesn't change the course of action from here. What it does change a little bit is obviously
it has the potential to change the timeline here. And I think that's really the disappointing part
that we're dealing with is you probably thought, oh, we'll be done at X date. And now it's pushed a little further on. What is the income between the two of you?
With my side digs I do, it's about $6,200 a month.
Okay. And that's combined with both of you?
Yes.
Okay. And right now, have you projected this out? I mean, I know on EveryDollar,
there's that really cool financial roadmap
planner where you can kind of go in and say, okay, here's the, it'll project for you with the numbers
that you say, here's the date that you'll be done with baby step one. Here's the date you'll be done
with baby step two. Have you projected that? I'm too scared to look at it. Oh no, girlfriend. Like
that's what gives you hope. You got to see these numbers in real time because then you really have
control. When you see the numbers, real time because then you really have control.
When you see the numbers, you can look at them and go, I don't like that and I can change it.
But if you don't look at it, then you can just go through life la-ti-da and you land where you land and you end up where you end up.
And I think that you are the type of people who once you get your head around the facts of what it is, you'll go, oh, that ain't it. Like,
we're going to put the pedal to the metal on this. We're going to make more money.
And so please, please, please use that calculator. We also have just a Ramsey Solutions debt payoff
calculator. You can use that. But knowing the numbers and knowing the truth around the situation
is a game changer. That is what puts the game back in your hands. Yes. Okay. And then
suddenly it's not a monster in the closet anymore. Right now it's a monster in the closet. You don't
know how long it's going to take. All you know is you got some bad news and it made you feel a type
of way, but we can take that and we can use it as ammunition. If you do what John said, which is you
walk through the emotions around it, but then we get out the calculator and we actually find the real numbers and go, okay, this is the dragon that we
have to slay. And here's how we have to slay it. Yes. Yeah. Do you have every dollar? I have the
free version. Okay. So Christian, we'll pick up, we'll make sure to get you into the premium
version, at least for a little while, we'll give it to you for free. And then you can decide if
you like it and if you want to keep it. But that I'm telling you, I think for you
with the motivation that you need, premium is going to be the thing because it's got the
transaction tracking in there that you can do. It's got the paycheck planning in there that you
can do. It's got the financial roadmap, which is what I said. That's going to keep you super duper
motivated so that in the face of kind of the striking news, you can stay upbeat. You can
know what your path is and you can actually get out of this. Yes. Okay. Awesome. Thank you. I love
this for you. But I think it's important to call this out. So she mentioned there's $35,000 new
dollars and they're broken up into 14 different little loans. We're just going to put those loans
as though they were credit cards or they're just going to go in order of importance, smallest to largest.
Who cares about that?
We're just going to start at the bottom.
Yep.
And I actually get excited about loans like that.
Oh, yeah.
Because they're going to get a lot of momentum real quick.
100%, John.
I couldn't agree more.
What John says is exactly right.
And if I could add a little piece to that, because she did mention some of the
government plans like save plan and things like that. Hey, I know save plan has been a taboo word
around here, but I can tell you if you are intensely working the baby steps, signing up for
something like that can actually be helpful in order to lower your minimum payments. Because
with the debt snowball, you pay minimum payments on everything. Then you put the extra money on
the smallest debt, right?
So having lower minimum payments behooves you for the moment so you can put a whole
lot on the smallest debt and get it gone fast.
So Jessica, in your case, I would do that.
If you can apply for it and get lower minimums, yes, ma'am, because you're the person who's
about business and who's actually going to pay off these loans quickly.
Now, if you're the lollygagger, John, if you're the one who's just like a free ride,
I'm going to take it.
Don't do that because those student loans
are going to be around forever for you.
And I hate that I have to even play
both sides of that coin.
But for those of you who thought
I was just saying,
Jade said to go to save plan.
No, I didn't.
I'll tell you all day long.
If you're going to a save plan
or you're going to the repayment plan,
I always suggest people sign up for it. Don't rely on it. Yeah. yeah sign up for it but if it's so that you can go get that tahoe
that's why that's what i'm saying don't do that yeah you're playing yourself go out to eat more
no but if it's going to let you get some more breathing room so you can take that extra cash
and pay off more crap faster that's right all day every day all day every day so yeah for jessica i
would definitely do that into john's point when you do have student loans that you're paying off, and there's
lots of them, sometimes they'll roll several into one payment.
But if you look closer, they are individual loans with individual account numbers.
And so when the time comes, you pay the minimum payment, satisfy that, satisfy the interest
on that.
But when it comes time to make that extra payment, make sure you're calling the payment
in because sometimes you can't do it online.
Sometimes you can, sometimes you can't. But go through and say, okay, I want the extra payment
to go on the principle of this individual itty bitty loan, not on the principle of the entire
group. Because if you do it like that, you'll never make progress. And you'll be out here
frustrated, wondering why it's taking so long to pay off your loan. So there's a way to do this.
There's a method to that madness. Hey, if you want to finish the show, we got another hour to go, but you have to go to the Ramsey Network app in order to do it.
But don't worry. All you need to do is go to your app store and just Google Ramsey Network app and
you'll see it. And you can log in there, whether you're on Google or whether you're on Android or
whether you're on Apple, you can get in where you fit in. It's absolutely free. We'll see you over
there. This is see you over there.
This is The Ramsey Show. Hey, you're still here?
What are you doing?
You do know that the rest of today's show is playing right now over on the Ramsey Network app, right?
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or just click the link in the show notes to download the app for free.
Yep, you heard me right, for free.
Then right there on the home screen,
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Bada bing, bada boom.
All right, I'm getting out of here.
Enjoy, we'll see you on the app.