The Ramsey Show - Make Decisions With the Future in Mind (Not the Present)
Episode Date: July 3, 2024📱Download your Ramsey Network App for free today! Dave Ramsey & Dr. John Delony answer your questions and discuss: "Should I feel this anxiety about buying a second home?" "My abusive dad is i...n control of my money," "My car died; should I take out a loan to replace it?" "My mom is taking advantage of my financially," "My girlfriend doesn't want to do premarital counseling" Support Our Sponsors: Zander Insurance: Go to zander.com or call 800-356-4282 for a fast and easy quote today. BetterHelp: betterhelp.com/Delony to get 10% off your first month NetSuite: Free KPI checklist, visit netsuite.com/Ramsey Churchill Mortgage: Get started at ChurchillMortgage.com Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! ☎️ Share your thoughts on The Ramsey Show & more! 🏠 Find a Ramsey Trusted Real Estate Agent 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! 📚Teach Kids About Money! Listen to more from Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people
build wealth, do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, number one best-selling author,
host of the Dr. John Deloney Show, and PhD in counseling.
He's my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Marie is in Washington, D.C.
Hi, Marie. How are you? Hi, Dave. Hi, Marie. How are you?
Hi, Dave.
I'm well.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Yeah.
So I'm calling because I'm wondering if I should be more forthcoming about my financial
situation with my parents in order to gain, I guess, credibility on the topic of personal finance.
What do you need credibility from your parents?
Yeah. So over the years, I've tried to share the baby steps because I've had success with them
and nothing has quite stuck. I've gifted them the book in print and in audio.
I've also gifted them like budgeting app subscriptions. And even still, I've watched
them make bad financial decisions over the years. And recently, my dad started talking about
Roth IRAs.
And I was, like, surprised that this term was in his vocabulary.
So when I asked him what spurred him on, he was telling me about this, I couldn't help but think, like, gee, my dad
is more, like, willing to listen to a random stranger on the Internet over his own daughter.
That's probably always going to be the case.
You're suffering from what we call powdered butt syndrome.
Once someone has powdered your butt, they don't want your opinion on money or sex.
Generally speaking, I mean, it's a rare parent relationship on a rare subject
that the kid speaks into the parent's life until the parent is somewhere around 80.
It does sometimes, but you're never a prophet in your own land, Jesus said, right?
And this is your land.
So it's very, very difficult the only and i'll just tell you the vast majority of my family sharon's family
does not do the stuff we teach oh wow tens of millions of americans do but not my people
so i mean that you know that they they like what we do they think it's impressive and they
they're proud of us for helping people but you know there's a handful of them do it and the rest
of them don't i'm just saying so um they just kind of look at us like we're you know vegetarians or
something like we're weird you know i mean it's like and so um anyway the uh uh the only hope you've got is not to tell them
what to do which is what you're searching for credibility on uh your only hope is just to tell
your story and say you know dad I was I was out of control I was in chaos and when I started doing
a budget I had this experience and
then I started working these baby steps and then I had this experience and now gosh I know you'd
be really proud I mean now I've got x number of dollars in my 401k and and this stuff really
worked for me and I'm just I'm just so excited and I and you just tell your story.
Don't even bring them up.
If they then say, well, that'll never work for me,
you could just say, well, it might.
It might.
If you want to talk about it any time, I'm here to help.
But then please just have your expectations really low.
The secret to happiness is low expectations.
I don't think you're going to have a, unless it's a very unusual situation,
a high percentage of the time you're not going to have a high influence over your parents.
Can I tell you why, Marie?
Yeah, go for it.
Because this is not a you problem.
This is a him problem.
And I love the fact that you have been searching high and low for what you're doing wrong in
communication but you're not doing anything wrong he's pretty lucky to have you as a daughter yeah
yeah he just he literally can't see it I just don't want you to have the expectation that he's
going to suddenly go oh that little girl that I taught to ride the bicycle in the backyard is now a
millionaire. You know, it just, our brains just don't work that way very well. It's very unusual.
I'm thinking of my grown kids right now who've got great relationships with, they, you know,
run segments of our life, our business. And I, I've been in the room when they try to tell dave what to do and it's
incredible generally doesn't go well it does not go well it's just like i mean i'm you know and
even though you know it sometimes if they do it three or four times i'll hear it but the first
time even and i'm in a room where i'm asking for this but now it's you know especially when you
get on a personal level and that's in a business situation.
Here's where Marie, here's where you can elevate the whole the maturity of the whole interaction.
Do you want to tell your dad about this, this Ramsey plan and this get out of debt plan?
Because you want him to look at you at the end of the day and be like, man, you really saved us.
You did a great job,
daughter. I'm proud of you. Thank you. Or do you want him to learn about the Ramsey stuff,
this plan, because you want your dad to have a better relationship with money and to finally have peace inside his home. Because if that's what you want, wherever he gets this information,
let's cheer him on for it. If he gets it from a TikToker and he comes to you and says hey i'm gonna pay off all my debts and maybe that tiktoker is george campbell by the
way but i'm gonna pay off all my debts i'm going to start putting some money in some roths let's
exhale that's our ego and let's just be happy that dad's making some better choices with money
if it's about hey i need him i this is gonna be my avenue for him to be proud of me finally
have that conversation with him.
Ask him directly, Daddy, are you proud of me?
Or do you think I'm doing a good job just as a young adult?
Let him have that conversation, but don't use this as a proxy.
Otherwise, you're going to make yourself bonkers doing that.
Yeah, yeah.
And please, really, don't expect for you to be the solution.
If it is, it's wonderful, but it's highly unusual. And the only
possible way with the people closest to you is to not tell them what they're doing wrong, but
instead just tell them about your story. No one can argue about your story. This is my story.
This is what I did. This is when I was scared. This is when I goofed up. And when I changed that
and I started doing this other thing, it started working. And here's where I am now. And this is when I goofed up and when I changed that and I started doing this other thing it started working and here's where I am now and this is and then I went through this and then I sold a car
and then I did this and then I did that and you just walk through your story it's your story
nobody can debate your story you can debate the theoretical probabilities of the baby steps
but you can't really debate your story and you especially can't, I think we talk a lot about the trees, Dave.
You can't debate the fruit.
And if people see you always picking up the tab at dinner
and you drive in a car that you don't owe any money on
and you just bought a nice house
that you put 50% down on,
like they begin to ask that question,
what are you doing differently?
It's the same in our church circles.
We always tell people no one's ever started following Jesus because they lost an argument.
They just see that, man, that guy's got more light and joy in his life.
I want to learn about that.
So you mean hateful Christian posts on YouTube don't lead people to Jesus?
I haven't seen it yet.
No.
I haven't seen it yet.
Who knew?
So you guys in the comments section it's not working for
you who knew now there you go this is the ramsey show are you working the baby steps one of the
smartest and most impactful changes you can make is to ditch your cash value life insurance plan
if you have one and replace it with a term life policy. Listen, the only thing a cash value policy is good for is overcharging you for the life insurance
and then paying you a crappy rate of return on your overpayment.
Stop wasting your money and really focus on getting out of debt and growing your savings.
For over 25 years, I've trusted and used Zander Insurance to find the best rates on term life insurance
from the top-rated term life insurance from the
top-rated companies. They keep the whole thing simple. You can apply online or over the phone,
and they even have low-cost plans that don't require an exam. Go to zander.com or call 800-356-4282.
Even if you don't have a cash value policy, if you're one of the 70 of people who have no life insurance or not enough it's
even more important to get this done 800-356-4282 or zander.com
happy birthday america you big beautiful beast you absolutely incredible best country in the world
you don't believe me?
Try visiting some of the other places.
You'll come back here going, oh, wow.
We got warts, but we're gorgeous.
Unbelievable.
Wow.
Very cool.
Hey, 4th of July flash sale right here at Ramsey from today through Sunday, July the 7th.
We're going to have the lowest prices we have had in over 12 14 months
ten dollars for the baby steps millionaires book ten dollars for own your past change your future
number one best seller from the guy to my right dr john deloney paycheck to purpose by ken coleman
ten dollar know yourself know your money by that rachel woman. $10. Get it all for $10.
Not bad at all.
Ramsey Personality stuff and more, by the way.
Flash sale.
Flash sale.
4th of July flash sale.
Just through Sunday.
So don't miss this.
Check it out.
Ramseysolutions.com slash sale.
Jump in the store.
You'll see all the goodies going on.
It's a deal.
There's some deals.
Tyler's in Houston, Texas.
Hey, Tyler, what's up? Hey hey dave thanks for taking my call uh my wife and i uh watch your show all the time and
we love what you're doing and what you stand for thank you sir and yes sir yep so i had a question
for you i'm dealing with you know some fear and anxiety i, um, with potentially buying a new house. So my wife and I, we purchased a home in 2020, um, in a lower income, lower tier schools.
And, uh, we have two little girls, four-year-old and a two-year-old looking to get them in
some better schools and, um, getting them in a different area. So we currently right now owe $199,000 on the current home.
We could probably sell this one for around $300,000 to $320,000. We currently have a 2.9%
interest rate, so we're paying about $1,500 a month. The new house is about 390.
We could probably bring that down to 370, the 6.75% interest rate.
So that's putting us around 2,500 to 2,800 in payments, which puts us within that 25% to 30% wheelhouse that you're looking at.
I'm getting about 10,000 a month, so $160,000 to $170,000 a year.
We have no debt, $35,000 six-month rainy day fund.
So I'm trying to decide if this is a right move or not.
It is.
It is.
You need to do it.
Okay.
Yeah, you're fine.
Because there's two things that are going to happen in the future,
three things that are going to happen in the future, maybe, two of them for sure.
Number one, your income is going to go up long-term.
Agreed?
Yes, sir.
Number two, the house value is going to go up long-term.
And in a better neighborhood, it's going to go up more than in a not-so-good neighborhood.
Agreed?
Yes, sir.
Okay.
So both of those things are going to make this a smarter investment every day after you buy it.
So your point of greatest strain is the first day.
And every day after that, the strain diminishes.
Follow me?
The third thing that could happen is rates could go down and you could refinance.
Right.
So we marry the house, we date the rate.
The mortgage is not permanent.
Okay.
You're not stuck with the mortgage.
Makes me feel better hearing that from you because I've been beating myself up over it yeah i think you're being wise beyond belief
compared to your neighbors compared to the americ average american walking around right now
who would have just went yeah give me that i want that i'll take one of those and yeah an
adjustable rate mortgage while rates are going up and stupid butt statements like that and so that's
you know because i want one and i deserve it and i have a smartphone that gives me everything i want so no one can tell me no about anything and they go
buy crap they can't afford you're not you're not even close you're not on that spectrum dude
you're being very wise so your your anxiety is um just due to you being reasonably conservative
and you're thinking about this but um and uh you know and if your
anxiety makes sure that you do a budget and it makes sure that you don't overspend on a bunch
of new furniture or something when you move into the house or going to debt to buy a new car after
you move into the house or something silly like that if your anxiety tempers your stuff then the
anxiety is doing its job right john that's exactly right's exactly right. Does that sound good, Tyler?
Yes, sir.
Yeah, you know, before I met my wife, I was, you know, as Dave said,
spending like hours in Congress and making some poor decisions. And then, you know, now that I have a family, two little girls, I think,
you know, that weight of that.
Good husband, good dad.
Yeah, good dad.
Yeah, you're showing up for your family, man.
And know that your anxiety is right here. Yeah it's it's throwing up the caution flags are you thinking
this through you're doing this right so it's it's it's doing its job and we're going to do the next
right move i'm getting awfully close to the edge here i'd kind of want anxiety to tell me that
right because you're on the your numbers are on the bubble you're right you're you know you go
much further up than this you're're going to have a problem.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
You know, you were right.
You walked right up to the edge of the guidelines and maxed them out.
But I think you're going to be okay.
I really do.
You know, as far as would the Ramsey Show folk, me included, tell you to do this deal?
Yeah, we just did.
So that's simple.
Open phones at 888-825-5225
jesse's in los angeles hi jesse how are you i'm doing well how are you better than i deserve
what's up um i think you actually have a question about my current 401k okay and it's a traditional 401k. Mm-hmm.
And I'm wondering if I'm able to take my traditional into a full-off 401k.
Yes, but you'll have to pay taxes on it.
Oh, okay.
There's no penalty, but there's taxes.
So what's the balance?
The balance, it's $226,000 currently.
Okay.
So you're going to need $50,000.
You got an extra $50,000 laying around?
Not currently.
Okay.
No, then I wouldn't do it.
Okay.
Today.
Now, what you can do is change your contributions from this day forward into Roth.
Oh, okay.
And will the same...
It doesn't change anything then.
You just say, okay, the money I was putting into the 401k traditional,
now I want to put it into 401k Roth, and that's fine.
That doesn't cost you anything.
I mean, you may have a little bit of a tax bill, but it's tiny, tiny, tiny.
Then later on, when you get your house paid off and you got some extra money,
if you want to flip the rest of this over and you got some extra money and you
want to get it growing tax-free, then yeah, it's a good move to do it, but it's not a good move,
you know, like while you're trying to get out of debt or while you're trying to do other stuff.
And on a side note of that, I have to thank Dr. Deloney. I called not too long ago,
sold my truck. He said to sell it on the weekend, it and i'm just went from a fifty thousand dollar bet to twenty two thousand whoa nice move
way to go man jesse in los angeles selling a truck my baby it was but i need to did you cry
just a little not a little i did i saw that i saw that jaguar all those years ago i cried just a little. Not a little. I did. I saw that Jaguar all those years ago.
I cried just a little.
I was that little too attached to a dadgum car.
Are you married, Jesse?
I'm not.
I'm not.
I'm single.
Wow.
Man, you really stepped up.
I'm proud of you.
Good for you.
Yeah, not a lot of single guys selling their trucks, man.
You just moved up even more cool points, brother.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think you're like a grown-up and stuff
way to go man i'm proud of you good work very good work open phones at 888-825-5225 so the
roth when we're talking about uh putting your money in your retirement and baby step four
15 going into retirement and good growth stock mutual funds. I spread mine, and I suggest you do too, across four types.
Growth, growth and income, aggressive growth, and international.
Pick good long track records, preferably 10 years or longer.
So you've got a predictable environment for these mutual funds.
Then you can project what you're going to get out of that.
The best place you can put money is where you get a match.
The second best place to put money is Roth 401k Roth IRA because it grows tax-free.
The third best place is traditional. So it's almost rock, paper, scissors, but it goes only
one direction. Match beats Roth beats traditional.
So you max your match out, you max your Roth out until you get to 15%. If you're still not there and one of your spouses only has a traditional available,
then you do the traditional as your last step to get to the 15% and baby step four.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. This is the season for Halloween. It's October.
We're wearing costumes and we're wearing masks. If you haven't started planning your costume yet,
get on it. And while you're thinking about it, I want you to be honest. A lot of us hide ourselves.
We hide our true selves behind costumes and masks all the time. We do this at work.
We do this around our friends.
We do this around our families.
We even do this when we look at ourselves in the mirror.
I know because I've been there multiple times in my life, and it's the worst.
If you feel like you're stuck hiding behind masks and costumes all the time,
if you find yourself hiding from your true self,
I want you to consider talking with a therapist.
Therapy is a place where you can be honest,
where you can talk to somebody else and reflect and learn,
and you can accept all the parts of yourself over time
and start living an authentic life.
Masks and costumes should be for Halloween parties,
not for our emotions and our true selves.
And if you're considering therapy,
try calling my friends at BetterHelp.
BetterHelp is 100% online therapy.
You can talk with your therapist anywhere
so it's convenient for you and your schedule.
Just fill out a short online survey
and you'll be matched with a licensed therapist.
Plus, you can switch therapist at any time
for no additional cost.
Take off the costumes and take off the mask
with BetterHelp.
Visit betterhelp.com
slash Deloney to get 10% off your first month. That's betterhelp.com slash Deloney.
In the lobby of Ramsey Solutions, we do the show every Monday through Friday from one to four
central time. You're welcome to come hang out, watch, have a free homemade chocolate chip cookie, some free coffee, and watch the show.
And it's free to watch, and some say it's worth what you pay for it.
So there you go.
On the debt-free stage in the lobby, though, is Joseph and Candace.
Hey, guys, how are you?
Doing great, Dave.
We're great.
Excellent, excellent.
Welcome.
Where do y'all live?
So we're just outside of Atlanta, Georgia, in Stone Mountain. Oh, yeah. I know it well. Well, cool. How much debt do y'all live? So we're just outside of Atlanta, Georgia in Stone Mountain.
Oh, yeah.
I know it well.
Well, cool.
How much debt did y'all pay off?
We paid off $47,500.
Cool.
How long did that take?
About 16 months.
Good for you.
And your range of income during that time?
We started at $107,000 and got it up to about $120,000 with some side hustles and pay raises.
Cool.
What do you all do for a living?
I'm an IT specialist at a Christian school.
And I'm an elementary school librarian.
I'm at a public school.
Awesome.
Very cool.
And what was the most lucrative side hustle, the one you made the most money at?
We actually did a cleaning side hustle where we went to a small business and did cleaning for them so that
was that's really you make good money yeah yeah and it's hard work but it's it's uh man it's
amazing well cool yeah very cool good for you what kind of debt was the 48 grand uh we had student
loans i had about 3500 and then she had some from undergrad and then I also had a personal loan that I'd used to start a small business,
but since I have closed that.
Ouch.
Yeah.
It was a life lesson.
Close the dream, and then you get to pay payments on the dream.
Yeah, that's called a nightmare.
Yeah.
Ouch.
No fun at all.
Wow.
How long have you guys been married?
About three years.
Just celebrated our three-year anniversary in June.
Okay.
So after you're married about a year, you look up and go,
debt is everywhere. I've had it. Tell me about your I've had it moment. What was it brought you to the where you go, okay, we're doing this? Well, I had heard of you since
I was in college. FPU was actually taught at the church I was going to, so I was familiar with
Ramsey, but we didn't really actually get into it until we got married. I had picked up the book, the total money makeover. I read it and we had talked about it. She listened to the
audio book. And, um, from then on we, um, I took out that personal loan for the business. That was
really the, the I've had at moment. It's like, I felt like we went back $20,000 from where we're
already at. And, you know, you see the payments just kind of increase and stuff like that. So it's like, something's got to give here. Right. So we went
through financial peace university a second time. Yep. Had to do it twice to kind of get it through
and really get us on the plan. So went through it a second time together, uh, kind of like new
year's resolutions. And we just went gazelleelle intense we got the every dollar app started
budgeting um had been budgeting on paper before that but every dollar is way better than paper
um so really from that point on we were gazelle intense and took everything we had basically
learned to live on one income and throw the rest of it at debt so Candace when Joseph goes after
something he kind of goes all in oh yeah yeah so at what point in this process did you decide he wasn't crazy
instead you wanted to go all in uh pretty much the same after the personal loan i think it both
hit us at the same time and we looked at each other and said okay we got to do something about
this yeah this ain't cool it's not cool something's got to give what was your biggest fight as y'all
worked through this um i don't think we really had a huge fight.
I think really it was the personal, it was a little bit of a debate as to whether to take it out
because I was trying to kind of keep the business alive and stuff like that
to kind of pay for employees and stuff like that.
So it was really like, do we take it out?
Don't we take it out?
Oh, it's only a $375 a month payment.
So we ended up doing it and
you know but when we kind of got on the same page and everything like it's like okay let's just get
rid of all of this and let's just do it as fast as we can so joseph that was the most husband answer
we didn't really have let's be clear candace told him not to do it okay let's be clear and he didn't
listen and he had a spreadsheet and he was like, no, no, you don't understand.
Here's what's going to happen.
And she was like, I don't feel good about it.
And he's like, no, no, you don't get it.
This is a classic.
Then he was like, do you want to take FPU again?
Candice, if you talk to Sharon Ramsey, she'll tell you I did the exact same thing.
It's okay.
It's all right.
Okay, so when you're sitting at the kitchen table,
who wins the great debate in your home, private school versus public school?
I feel like we're both on the same page in that, you know, like, I mean.
You don't have to answer that.
I'll just mess it up.
You're good.
One of y'all will get fired if you answer that honestly,
so we can just let it ride.
Thanks, John.
Never do that.
That's not good, yeah.
Way to go, guys.
I'm so proud of you.
Who was cheering you on as you were doing this?
Definitely, we had a great church family.
I had some coworkers that have been through FPU
and are actually Baby Steps Millionaires.
So once I kind of told them that I was going through this process,
they were checking in on me weekly, like, how's it going?
That's cool.
Her parents, my brother brother it was just we
had a great support group very good very cool all right when people say how'd you pay off 48
thousand dollars in 16 months what do you tell them the key to getting out of debt is
i would definitely say if you're married working together being on the same page we had budget
meetings every month and sat down and talked about it to be sure we're on the same page we had budget meetings every month and sat down and talked about it to be sure we're on
the same page we both had every dollar to keep each other accountable so definitely good teamwork
and communication and i would just add to that um just having perseverance because life is still
going to hit you even when you're going through this debt payoff journey like for example i
actually got in a car accident last august and my was totaled. And you're so tempted to take that insurance money and just be like, oh, let's just do the easy thing.
Let's go down to the dealership, you know, put a down payment on a car, call it all good, wipe our hands.
You know, but I didn't do that because we were in this and it's like, I can't do debt anymore.
You know, I'm done with debt.
So I just took the money I could and bought, you know, a beater car and still driving it today.
But it gets me from point A to point B. So, you know, what are you driving? I'm driving a 2007
Honda CRV with about 200,000 miles on it right now. Okay, cool. What'd you pay for it? About
5,000. Okay. And how much insurance proceeds did you get from the total? 4,700. Oh, wow. So that
was it. So you were already driving a beater. Yeah. I was driving a 2,000. I was driving a
2,800. This is amazing how God works.
I was driving a 2,800 CRV
with about 275,000.
Crash that, get a
2,007 with 200,000. So I rolled
back the miles and it's a year difference,
but it's the LX brand, so it's got
the heated seats and the sunroof. Dude, that
car is halfway home. You're going to have that car
for a long time. Wow, that's pretty cool. Yeah, heated seats, sunroof so i mean dude that car is halfway home you're gonna have that car for a long time that's pretty cool yeah heated seats sunroof and a beater i know yeah
they didn't make beaters like that back in the day all right way to go man you guys that's good
good stories good stories well done so proud of y'all how's it feel to be free feels amazing we
feel like we can do anything now yeah definitely brought us closer together
like once we've done this like whatever we put our minds to there's it's only gets it goes up
from here you know it's really exciting so we're working on the baby step three right now doing the
fully funded emergency fund should be done within a couple months but just you know continue to have
those dream meetings and realizing this is actually doable this is possible and to you know
folks watching and listening like just get started know, don't wait another day,
just do it. And Joseph, what's the biggest lesson you learned? I know what it is. I can answer it
for you. She's probably right. Listen, listen, listen to the wife for sure. Yeah. You know,
you'll have another scheme one day and she'll just look at you and then you'll go, oh yeah.
All right. You're right. Right. Right. We'll remember, look, look, and she'll just look at you, and then you'll go, oh, yeah, all right, you're right.
Right, right.
We'll remember, look back and be like, let's not do that again.
I remember that.
Congrats, guys.
Thank you.
She doesn't even have to say a thing.
She just gives him the FPU look.
I like it.
Way to go, you guys.
Way to go.
So proud of you.
Very, very cool stuff.
Joseph and Ken to Stone Mountain, Georgia.
$48,000 paid off, off 16 months 107 to 120
including side hustles cleaning the local small business count it down let's hear a debt-free
scream three two one we're debt-free This is how it's done
Wow
Life is good
Pretty cool, John
That's so cool
Three years into their marriage
It's fun being
Almost 20 years past that
And they don't even realize
How they've set themselves up
I think he kind of has a glimpse of it I think he thinks he does I can see it forward, yeah almost 20 years past that, and they don't even realize how they've set themselves up.
I think he kind of has a glimpse of it.
I think he thinks he does. I can see it forward, yeah.
But man, when they're multimillionaires 20 years from now,
and...
Encouraging some young couple just got married
to pay off their stupid student loan debt.
Yeah.
Or their leftover loan from a failed business.
Whatever, yeah.
And he'll still be driving that Honda CR-V
because it'll still be going.
It probably will. It'll still be going going i hope he's not driving it this is the ramsey show what does the future hold for business ask nine experts and you'll get 10 different answers
economic growth or a recession business taxes will go up or down.
AI will help us work or it will replace us all.
But there's no such thing as a crystal ball.
That's why more than 40,000 businesses have future-proofed themselves
with NetSuite by Oracle, the number one cloud enterprise resource planning system.
Ramsey Solutions uses NetSuite and you should too. Whether
your company's earning millions or even hundreds of millions, NetSuite helps you respond to
immediate challenges and seize your biggest opportunities. With one unified business
management suite, there's only one source of truth for the visibility and control you need to make quick decisions.
NetSuite's real-time insights and forecasting help you see into the future with actionable data.
And when you're closing the books in days, not weeks,
you can spend less time looking backward and more time focusing on what's next. And speaking of what's next, download the CFO's Guide to AI and Machine Learning
at netsuite.com slash Ramsey.
It's free at netsuite.com slash Ramsey.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Joe's with us in St. Louis.
Hi, Joe. How are you?
Hi. I'm sorry. I'm really nervous.
It's okay. We've never lost a patient. You'll be okay. So I'm 19, and for all of my,
for my two years of college that I've gone to so far, my dad has controlled
all of my savings money, and he invests the big chunks of it and tries to make more money.
He's been emotionally abusive in the past and he's decided in the last year that he does not
want a relationship with me whatsoever. He wants to come out but he doesn't want to give me
access to my own savings and so I'm wondering as an adult if that he doesn't want to give me access to my own savings.
And so I'm wondering, as an adult, if that just doesn't feel right, if he chooses not to have a relationship with me, should he have control of my money?
And also, he's legally obligated from the divorce to provide me with a car for work, and he won't give me a straight answer if he's going to give me a car to take to school and then I can't get a job and I'm in baby step
two so okay um your money in your savings I assume he and your mom saved this money or
did you put the money into no actually it's my money. Um, growing up, I was, I,
the rule in my house was you have to put half of whatever you make into savings. Um, he's like a big thing to use. Um, so, um, I've been putting half of my money into savings and I've worked
really, really hard. Is your name on the account? I don't know. He says that it's my money, but I've
never actually seen the account.
You just gave the money to him when you were a kid?
It was in my, yeah, when I was a kid. And then when I got a bank account,
I'd put it in my savings and then he would take out money whenever it got over a certain amount and he'd put it in the investment. Do you know what bank it's in?
Well, the bank that I would put it in was the local credit union.
Yeah.
But I don't know where he's got it.
You think he's moved it out of there?
I know he, I can see the bank. I know that he's moved, like he's told me he has like 13 grand in the investment.
And I've asked him for access to it, but he just sends me pictures of statements.
And then he got mad at me for not thanking him for making money on my money.
So if he took money out of an account with your name on it, I'm assuming his name was
also on the account as a account if you were a minor, and he took money out.
Yes.
Well, I guess it's going to be a joint account.
It could be he's a custodian of the account that's in your name.
If you can figure out.
Wait a minute.
He sent you a statement.
Yeah.
So you know where the money is.
Well, I haven't looked at it yet.
Okay.
Well, you know where the money is.
Contact that financial institution if your name is on the statement and take the money out.
Okay.
That's easy.
And if you open up an account...
I assume it's got your name on it.
No, I bet not.
I bet he opened an account of his own and moved it over there,
pulled it out of that credit union and stuck it over in his account
because he's going to, quote, unquote, make a bunch of money on it.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I'm not sure this guy's that smart.
Yeah, the first thing you need to do is figure out,
if you can figure out where the money is and if it is your name on the account, it's a simple thing.
Just walk up to the teller window and go, uh, my name is Joe and here's my social security
number.
I want to, uh, I want to close this account out and take the money out and just take my
money back in.
Even though he's, it's your money.
Take it.
He's not helping you.
He just said he's cutting you out.
You just told me he wasn't helping you.
I don't care what he supposedly is doing.
I mean, the reality is you're telling me he's taking your money.
That's what you're telling me.
So all you're going to do is just not allow that to happen by moving it.
And you need to pull all the money out of this joint account you'll have and open your own account.
Yeah, anything you can find that has your name on it, you're one of the owners.
You have access to the money. You're 19. Legally, you can walk up and your name on it, you're one of the owners. You have access to the money.
You're 19.
Legally, you can walk up and just cash out the account.
Just cash it out.
Okay.
And take the cash to somewhere else and open it exclusively in your name.
And, Joe, you want me to tell you something else kind of cool?
Yeah.
What college do you go to?
I go to St. Louis University.
Okay.
I would be willing to bet almost every college these days has an office called Student Legal Services
that helps students with things like traffic tickets and roommate disputes,
but they're attorneys that serve students.
I want you to go sit down with them and ask them about the divorce decree.
Ask your mom to send you that and tell them, I need this.
And hopefully, here's what we're looking for.
We're looking for one of those attorneys to write you a letter
or write your dad a letter
on your behalf.
That I need my money back per this
statement and I need access to the car
per the divorce decree. And he's going to receive
a letter from an attorney. And you've
already paid for this attorney with your student fees.
Okay.
And if you can't find the SLS office, the Student Legal Services office,
go ask your dean of students office, and they'll be able to direct you.
Yeah.
So you have a lawyer who's on staff to help you for free is what he's saying.
Well, it's not for free, but you've already paid for them.
It's not going to cost you any cash.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah.
But first and foremost, open those statements and figure out where the money is.
Go to that credit union and cash out anything that's in your name there and open that statement and see where he quote unquote invested
this money get in touch with that investment outfit if it's got your name on the account
your social security number on the account you're one of the owners simply cash it out
and uh then that puts you in where if you get all of that done then you're just in the
heartbreaking deal of dealing with an emotionally abusive dad who doesn't want a relationship with you.
That's the horrible thing.
And I'd like to just put this out into the world to clarify something.
That man is not a big fan of quote-unquote Dave Ramsey.
Because Dave.
He wouldn't be if he called here.
Well, there's a financial problem.
It wouldn't do well for him.
But you also honor your children.
And you also honor your spouse.
And you honor your word. And that man doesn't do any of those things.
Yeah, yeah.
So, I mean, if he's a fan, it's at a distance,
because if he got up close, it wouldn't be pleasant.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's just wrong.
I mean, it's just – but, you know, what we've got is a divorce,
and everybody's mad, and everybody's hurt,
and everybody's throwing stones, and, you know, kids hurt, moms hurt, dads hurt, everybody's
hurting, and hurting people hurt other people.
And, you know, that's what's going on.
So who knows exactly?
But, yeah, either way, you know, you You got to play through on these things and it's not,
it's not,
you know,
you need to make decisions,
folks in these situations that play well over a 10 year period of time,
not a 10 minute period of time because these are bad.
They're there.
They feel good in 10 minutes.
I don't want a relationship with you.
I'm a toxic jerk.
Those are all short term thinking.
I mean,
no one on their deathbed is glad that they lost their relationship with their kid.
Not over $13,000.
Good gosh.
Or the ego of having reinvested it for you and you're not grateful.
Give me a break.
This whole call reeks of ego, ego, ego, ego.
You're ungrateful.
I was trying to help you uh yeah
i could do without your help instead of sitting by his daughter and saying hey i know you're in
college but your mom and i just got divorced and we just blew up your entire world and it's going
to be hard for everybody and i'm hurting instead of that which is an emotionally mature response
it is oh you didn't make me feel good about my like what i did then
fine screw you i'm taking i'm literally gonna steal from you and uh i'm gonna hold it because
you can't do anything about it yeah hey i can't wrap my head around it all for your own good
though i can't like that's the one i just my daughter josephine will be here later on and
we're gonna spend a few days together just us two and i can't ever wrap my head around making a choice that i i'm gonna i'm gonna break
up this relationship she's not a teenager yet that's probably true that is probably true
the thought will occur to you no trust me the thought has occurred
but man i just can't wrap my head around it i told one of mine you might talk to your mother
that way but no one talks to my wife that way and lives oh yeah but man that's the teenage years
oh can you imagine a ramsey kid having a mouth?
Yes.
You can imagine that, can't you? I can.
That could happen.
The fruit usually bounces up against the tree trunk on its way down.
Oh, I love it.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Do you ever feel like you're finally making progress towards your goals
only to get quickly distracted by something else in your feed?
Well, that's why we created the Ramsey Network app, your single source for content that keeps you motivated.
The Ramsey Network app is designed to is the best place for uninterrupted content and no distractions.
Plus, you can search specific questions to get more personalized content in seconds.
So, for the days you need some extra motivation, you'll have proven advice at your fingertips.
It's time to get serious about your goals and shut out the
distractions for good. Simply search Ramsey Network in the App Store or Google Play. If
you're listening on a podcast, just click the link in the show notes to download our free
Ramsey Network app today. Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions. It's the Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth,
do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality,
number one best-selling author of the book Building a Non-Anxious Life,
host of the Dr. John Deloney Show, Ph.D. in Counseling,
is my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225. Jennifer is with us in Tampa. Hi, Jennifer, how are you?
I'm great. How are you?
Better than I deserve. What's up?
First of all, I'm very grateful for you guys taking my call, and I have probably a lot to
unpack here to fully understand the
financial picture that I'm in. I've known your name for a long time so I basically have a lot
writing on this phone call where it will probably change my life and be one of them.
Just totally turn my life completely around. My dad is gone and I don't have him anymore to ask
financial advice about and so I figured you would be the next best thing.
Wow.
That's a lot of responsibility.
Yeah, you've set this up big, Jennifer.
This is a big deal.
Don't screw it up, John.
Dave is probably going to give you bad advice, Jennifer, but I'll bail him out.
The funny thing is I'm pretty sure that I already know what you guys are going to say.
Oh, okay.
That makes it easier.
Okay.
It does.
I'm 37.
I'm a single mom, recently single mom of four kids. I'm a nurse. I make a decent income, a pretty decent income. When my
parents, I've actually lost both of my parents now. When my mom died, I inherited money from
that split between me and my sister. My dad was very financially savvy and had things
split all around with just different 401ks, Roth, life insurance, food insurance, gold,
very, very smart man. And in the loss of my mother, I made the financial decision to sell
my house and move to my childhood home that my parents raised us in and moving there meant that
I sunk just about every dime of my inheritance into remodeling it and fixing the property up
because when my dad died my mom kind of just got swallowed up in this home my question is
I am only between mortgage and student loan credit card debt, I'm only $320,000 in debt, which sounds like a lot, but the house is worth $1.1 million.
Why do you have a mortgage?
My parents had a little bit left of a mortgage on the property because...
Okay, how much is that?
It's $125,000.
Okay, and then the rest of the rehab on the house was done in cash?
Correct.
Okay.
What did you spend on the renovation?
I owe my sister 125,000 as well,
because that was kind of like the buyout for me taking over the house.
So basically I have essentially like a $250 mortgage on the house,
if that makes any sense.
Yeah, I got you.
Okay.
Okay. And then the
rest of that is student loan and credit card. And what's your sister's expectation on when she gets
her money? It has changed. So neither one of us knew what to do really when we lost our parents
with the money. And it has changed over time. Initially, it was that I would pay her 50 grand a year
until what I owed her was paid off.
And then we realized, well, that puts me in a certain tax bracket
and then I'm going to be taxed on this income
and it just kind of didn't really seem fair.
So then the next plan that my sister and I have...
You're not going to be taxed on the income.
She is.
But it's not income. Well, no, I would be taxed on the income she is but it's not income no i would i would be taxed on it because
the money i would pay my sister came from the investment accounts that my parents oh you would
pull it out of a return an inherited ira okay okay correct yes all right i got you so how much is in
the month in the inherited iras and that kind of stuff today? Today, right now, everything is essentially gone.
It may as well be gone.
I just have.
Oh, you've used it all.
You have cashed it out and paid the taxes after all.
And what do you make?
Yes, I have.
I make $45 an hour.
It changes by year based off of what.
In Florida, we can get seasonal here with snowboards and such.
So you're making, what is that, $80,000 a year?
Yeah, it's usually that at least. Yeah, okay. And how old are your kiddos for? 2017, five and three.
I started very, very young. Okay, all right. And
okay, and so you have a $120,000 mortgage, $120,000 owed to your sister,
and then you have other debt as well, right?
Correct.
And that's on what?
$58,000 in student loans and $10,000 in credit card.
Okay. All right.
Well, if you were not emotionally attached to the house, you would have already sold it, right?
No.
To be free.
To be free.
Because I could turn around.
Yeah, if you were not emotionally attached to this house,
the house is like, it's out of,
everything else in this picture fits in the picture,
then there's this house over here that's way big you know in terms of value and
if you didn't uh if you if it was not childhood home you'd not renovate it you weren't emotionally
attached you would have already sold it and cleaned up the mess before you called me right
i thought i was doing the right thing at the time yeah i didn't ask that i'm not i'm not
i'm not picking on you i'm saying again, let's pretend this house was somebody else's house
and you didn't care about it.
You're not emotionally attached.
If you woke up this morning in a house you did not care about in any way,
you would have already sold it today and you wouldn't have called me
to clean up all this, right?
Yes. have called me to clean up all this right yes yeah but the only so the only thing that's keeping you there is all of the history and that's valid that's part of the story it's valid for that to
hold you um the only question is what you know basically then you got the scales in front of you
on one side of the scales is the history and the memories and the part of your childhood you're
trying to recapture which is apparently a good family a good upbringing you you know huge respect
to your dad several times your house kind of represents all that on one side of the scale
on the other side of the scale is the stress uh over money the debt owed to your sister that now
you don't really have a way to pay unless you go get a mortgage um and the stress over this whole thing and your future is on the other side of
the scale so your past it's almost like your past is on one side and your future is on the other
exactly that's how it feels just talking to you so what are you going to do like i was
what are you going to do? I feel like I was... What are you going to do? I feel like if I sell the house,
then I'm 100% debt-free for the rest of my life.
Yeah.
And that, I feel, would be...
And I think that's the daughter that your dad raised.
Okay.
Didn't he?
I have a lot of guilt because i spent the money that they earned you didn't spend it you invested in renovating the house it should have made the house more valuable oh it certainly did
yeah so you're not it wasn't it wasn't consumed you didn't take a cruise around the world no i
mean it wasn't it wasn't the money's not you didn't burn the money it's invested into the house you're going to get it back out so i don't feel guilty at all
um i think you were doing a very sweet thing an honoring thing to your wonderful childhood
um and then i think the next step is to honor the legacy of your dad and mom
by having an awesome future.
I think the future wins on the scales if I'm you.
Don, what are you thinking?
Yeah, I think in one fell swoop,
she could honor her dad by setting herself up for the future.
She could honor her mom and dad by healing up that relationship with her sister and getting that debt out from between the two of them and be good to go.
This regret and guilt and stuff about the renovation and all,
it's in the past then.
And it wasn't a net zero.
It came out okay.
That's right.
I think you did pretty good.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Buying your first home is a big deal
and sets the stage for your financial success.
So work with a mortgage advisor you trust,
not just some random website.
Churchill Mortgage is Ramsey trusted because they help you avoid hidden traps and expertly guide you through every step.
Learn more at churchillmortgage.com.
This is a paid advertisement.
NMLS ID 1591.
NMLS ConsumerAccess.org.
Equal housing lender.
1749 Mallory Lane, Suite 100.
Brentwood, Tennessee 37027. Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Jerry's with us in Phoenix.
Hi, Jerry.
Welcome to The Ramsey Show.
Hey, thanks, guys.
Thanks for taking my call.
Sure.
What's up?
So I'm 58.
My wife is 57.
About three months ago, we started the Baby Step program.
Actually, we started off pretty well. We paid off $13K in credit card debt, $9K in car debt.
We're under the big one.
Outside of our home, we've got $210K in parent-plus student loans.
Ooh! Ouch.
Yeah, so we make about $220 a year.
So fortunately, we do have some.
We have an income stream.
But so here's where we sit with our assets, also retirement.
So we've got $45K in cash, $45K in Roth IRAs,
$170 in long-term retirement accounts. Our monthly expense is
about $7,500. So outside of that, we've got about $3K that we can put towards debt.
So where we're kind of struggling right now is this combination of, you know,
we're getting, we're older, right? We're getting closer to retirement age.
Where do we, do we, you know, we're kind of straddling baby step two and three.
We've already obviously done baby step one.
We've got cash in three.
But obviously this debt we want to get out of.
You know, my question is, should we look at that cash that we have, maybe split that in half?
Because right now, $45,000 puts us right at six months of a safety fund.
Light dispersed simply lights a room.
Focused will do surgery or cut metal.
You're trying to light the whole room and wondering why you're not getting progress.
You're going to have to get focused, and that's going to mean cutting your lifestyle.
You're going to have to not act like you make a quarter of a million dollars a year because, oh, by the way, you owe a quarter of a million dollars. You're broke. And if you're worried
about your age and you're approaching retirement, you should act like it and how austere, scorched earth your new lifestyle looks with your budget.
And it's not $3,000 a month, then it's more going towards this.
And we're going to pull out all the stops and clean up this mess while we can, because if we don't get this mess cleaned up, we're not going to have a good retirement.
So the faster and the more on fire that your hair is, the deeper you sacrifice, the faster
you'll get out.
And that requires complete focus, not trying to rework the baby steps.
Yeah.
So, you know, one of the things I'm juggling with, my wife and I are actually on the same
page. However, she's a little more one of the things I'm juggling with, my wife and I are actually on the same page.
However, she's a little more risk-averse than I am.
And so, you know, taking that cash that we have
and really paying down the debt to her, she's really uneasy about that.
Yeah, I'm pretty uneasy about you being broke people at retirement
after you made a quarter million dollars a year.
That's the risk I'm trying to avoid.
Okay. quarter million dollars a year that's the risk i'm trying to avoid okay not your tiny little emergency world that the 45 000 won't even pee on what about uh what about the roth iris you think we should no you should leave your
retirement alone but you should stop adding to it are you still adding to retirement
well i mean doing it we're you know small percent to work yeah see again you're adding to retirement yeah i mean doing it where you know small percent work
again you're trying to light the whole room you're trying to do everything for everybody
on this page and nobody's getting served dude that's that's the differentiation between what
we've been teaching and how we've been able to move people along all these years it's you have
to quit trying the best way to get your retirement funded is to get your butt out of debt.
The best way to get your emergency fund in place is to get your butt out of debt and
quit screwing around with trying to do seven things at once.
You're not doing it.
You're you suck at it.
And it's what got you here.
And so you've got to, you know, you guys have really got to stop and look at this.
Now, you can do your plan if you want to do it, but you called me.
And so that means I'm going to love you well and tell you the truth.
This is what you're doing has a low probability of getting you to a million dollar net worth
by the time you're 70.
What I'm telling you to do has a high probability of getting you there because I want all of this
debt gone in the next 24 months. I want you to act like your child's life depends on it for you
to clean up this freaking mess. Then when you don't have anything hanging over your head,
you got a quarter million dollars to go build wealth with, and you can turn all kinds of stuff into at that point and make things happen
but the power of focus is tantamount to to the probability of success here john yeah it
i won't add to that you're right it's just tough when you see somebody who's clearly
um successful and smart in one area and unable to see it or hear it in another area.
It's just tough.
Yeah.
Well, what you are seeing correctly, Jerry, is all of these things are important.
What you're seeing incorrectly is the fastest way to get them all addressed
is not simultaneously. It's completely stop your retirement. Don't take anything out,
but stop adding to it. Clean out your emergency fund and step on your lifestyle with a muddy boot.
Live like no one else so that later you can live like no one else. No discipline seems pleasant at
the time, but it yields a harvest of righteousness. two years you could have your life back right think think of
it take money aside because it it tends to light a fire think of getting your kid out the door
you have 15 minutes to get them out into the car so you don't get to church on time
if you try to put them in the shower and put clothes on them and brush their teeth
and feed them breakfast at the same time you're never going to go anywhere get them in the shower get them out dry them off put clothes on them then
get them and you'll get out you'll get out the door much quicker and you'll get out the door
right steps and you're not going to just have soggy cereal Wyatt is in Cedar Rapids Iowa hi
Wyatt how are you good how are you guys doing better we deserve. What's up? So I have a question.
I had recently bought a car off Facebook Marketplace about two months ago
because the car I had before that died on me, and I just got word.
I had to have it in and out of the shop the past couple weeks.
I just got word yesterday that it is going to need either like
a full engine swap or they're going to have to pull the whole engine in general yeah so you're
going to sell it you're going to sell it for salvage what'd you pay for it uh 2800 all right
and so you'll sell it for a grand or 1200 bucks like it sits and you got any money to add with it
well i have i just recently started the baby steps so i have a thousand dollars saved up
and i have so you're gonna go buy another two thousand dollar car then huh
yeah what that's cool that's nothing wrong with that where am i yeah that's where my question is
is do you recommend me to do that like yes go on facebook or try to risk it again yeah yeah you're buying a throwaway car
i don't want you to drive this car the rest of your life they generally do fall apart that's
why they they're cheap now i will help you for this are are you at home are you living at home
i i live i live about 30 minutes away from home in town i I just graduated college. Okay, good for you. Is your dad around? Yeah. Okay.
Start talking to him and ask him to help you with this car search. Here's what you're looking for.
You're looking for an ugly automobile that you can't get a date because of the car.
You better be good looking because you ain't getting a date because of the car you better be good looking because you ain't getting a date
because of this car it's ugly okay but it's very reliable low miles and it's like a uh a 2000 model
25 1999 25 year old honda accord jesus said to that. He said they're all in one Accord.
So you just, it's a Jesus car, okay?
We're going to get a Camry.
We're going to get something with some age on it, but not 200,000 miles.
And it does not look good.
It may have hail damage.
Like we had two people in our parking lot right now that drive hail damaged cars.
They're like $6,000, $7, thousand dollar cars but they paid like two grand for them because they look like they were shot in iran right yeah yeah i'm just and so that's what you're
looking for all right you're looking for something that people make fun of and you have to give it a name. Old Bessie. Old Blue. Henrietta.
Old Dave.
What?
Old John.
The Mule.
Old John the Mule.
This is the Ramsey Show.
The best way to make the most of your money is by creating and sticking to a plan.
In the money world, we call that a budget every dollar the world's best budgeting app with tens of millions of users makes it simple to plan
your spending track your expenses save what matters most work the baby steps get guidance
from us as you go along oh wow keep a pulse on your spending make the progress with your money
goals be in agreement with your spouse both of you have the app on your phone. Ding, ding, ding.
Download EveryDollar for free in the App Store or Google Play. Check it out at DaveRamsey.com
or check it out at RamseySolutions.com or EveryDollar.com. And, yeah, that's what you ought to do.
Jackson's with us.
Jackson's in Montgomery, Alabama.
Hey, Jackson, what's going on?
Hi, Dave.
First of all, thank you for having me on the show.
Super excited.
So I am 21 years old, married with a three-month-old kid,
or not three months anymore, excuse me, five-month-old,
and recently separated from the military.
And my wife and I are roughly $16,000, $17,000 in debt, and we have no idea which way is
up.
We're just kind of stuck.
We don't really know how to get out of all this debt is our big issue.
How old are you?
21.
Thanks for your service. Why were you separated from the military?
Yeah, I was, uh, 10 days away from graduation of basic and we found out that I had a medical condition that I'm not allowed to serve with. So unfortunately, um, which really sucks cause
we kind of put all of our eggs in that basket because we were in debt before I went and we knew that we were going to make a lot of money but hopefully enough to kind of get
us you know in the right direction so now you know just got home probably roughly a month ago
I don't have a job working on getting one my wife started a job last week making $10 an hour and we live with my parents.
Okay.
So what you have, I'm sorry you've gone through this.
It's hurtful.
It's scary.
Yeah.
What you've got is a career crisis.
Yes.
Okay.
All of your questions are answered when you have a steady big income.
If you got a job tomorrow making $60,000 a year, you wouldn't have called me.
Yeah.
So what you have is an income problem. Agreed?
Yes, absolutely.
And there's two parts to the equation to land that.
One is you've been home a month. are you ill physically where you can't work uh no not not at all okay just a thing they were just scared to put you on a stress at basic okay
yeah um so uh i want you to get three jobs delivering stuff by nightfall today all right it's called door dash uber and pizzas and you can just go
sign up and start doing that right now there's no excuse for you not to be engaged in doing
something for a whole month in your mother's basement go get something going so i currently Something going. So I currently, when I left for basic, left our only vehicle with my best friend in Texas,
because that's where we were living when I went.
And he's been working overtime, a bunch of stuff.
He's been unable to get it to me.
So it's kind of a big hindrance of why I don't.
Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute.
Okay. You've been in alabama a month get your butt to texas and get
your car he's driving it out tonight actually oh okay good good okay you got that solved all right
so go ahead and get the three jobs in i want want you doing something immediately. So the immediate need.
This does a couple of things for you.
One is it starts throwing some cash on this mess.
Two is the activity is good for your spirit and your soul.
Hard work is good for you.
It brings dignity.
And three is you walk different when you go into the interview for a real job
when you're not broke and scared your voice tone is different you have a little bit of swagger you're not
desperate you don't have the stink of loser on you all right but when you're
broke scared all of us walk different talk different and don't interview well right so it helps your confidence
level when you walk in there so i'm going to send you a copy of ken coleman's book what you're wired
to do which includes their long-term plan okay it's got the get clear career assessment i'm going
to give it to you as my gift and And I want you to take that assessment,
and it's going to give you some guidelines on the types of long-term careers you should be
plugging into. And then I'm also going to send you his other second bestseller, or his first
bestseller, which is called The Proximity Principle, which is how to land a job in the career field
that this Get Clear Career Assessment lays out but between now and
the time you land that job i want you working on something making some kind of money swinging a
hammer on a deck pushing a lawnmower delivering something to somebody that needs it being
delivered i want your butt in gear every day that'll stack cash for you and that will give you dignity and you will walk different
into the other interviews so i do have a job interview coming up this monday um at like a
local place installing emergency lights on vehicles um but what's that gonna pay what's
that gonna pay that's that's the problem i don't know yet it wasn't online and when I went in and talked to the guy
he didn't tell me and that that is a worry of of those it's not a worry it's just one thing
you're looking at you're going to look at 63 things before you land the big thing and by the
way when you're done with this I want you to decide what it is you want to do not just something that
drops in your lap what do you want to be what do you want to be doing when you're 31
let's get about the business of becoming that my i mean my goal it currently is uh federal law
enforcement just because i like the benefits and okay then let's start working towards that
okay um currently i'm not sure that's a good reason to go into federal law that's a terrible
reason to go into federal that means to go into federal law benefits yeah benefits are you get shot at but the um no i i
going to go to be a federal police officer if you are just have a burning desire in your soul to go
serve your community don't do it for the benefits that's the worst kind of police officers you can
get benefits collecting a check the police officers that are there to serve and protect their communities,
that's what we need more of.
But you need to do some soul searching, man.
Yeah, you need to think about what it is you want to be from your heart
and how you're going to do that in a way that provides for your family
a level of prosperity in the next decade.
And then what are the steps to get there?
And in the meantime, go make some dad what are the steps to get there and in the meantime go make
some dadgum money because you'll feel different your confidence will change i promise you it's
a big deal and john there's actual data uh he's not depressed but uh but he's having a he's in a
downtime of his life i mean his dream just got taken away by the military he was going to do
that and that rug got so he's trying to emotionally recover from that so it's not like i suspect it's not full
on depression but the data on depression is uh physical exercise sunlight and activity got to
you got to do some stuff so if this sounds harsh but in his situation because of the the totality
of it he's got a five-month-old.
I've got to put food in that baby's mouth.
I have a brand-new wife, and she just got a job,
but she only found a job making $10 an hour.
I'm in my mama's basement again.
In your mama's basement.
If he was my friend, if he was somebody that came and sat with me,
I would say, do you get 48 hours to have your heart broken and be sad
and walk around your neighborhood, and then you are throwing boxes at the night shift at Walmart for $27 an hour, whatever
they're paying, 20 bucks an hour.
You have to get out there and start doing it.
We're going to figure it out.
Go on your lunch break and go to this other job interview.
By the way, this job interview is going to be about ego.
It's going to be inside.
It's going to be cool.
And it's not going to pay what throwing boxes is.
It's not going to pay what being an assistant manager at a local McDonald's is.
And he's not in a place where ego can drive right now he's got to make some money
to feed a baby and in the evenings he can begin planning applying sitting at the inner at the
computer trying to research some of these jobs um take that are the long-term plans long-term
plans right now he's got to put food in that baby's mouth and yes he'll start walking taller
he'll start acting his life will clarify for
what he does and doesn't want to be doing yeah you get knocked out of the saddle you can sit
and study horses or you can get back on the saddle get in the saddle study horses while
you're riding but you gotta start riding you'll learn more about them this is the ramsey show
dr john deloney ramsey personality is my co-host today.
Today's question comes from James in Montana.
James writes,
You've done a wonderful job teaching about how to build wealth
and what buckets to use in order to invest.
I know match beats Roth and Roth beats traditional
and traditional beats broker's accounts.
My question is, what is the best way to do the reverse?
Where do you pull from first for spending when you retire?
In the reverse.
Traditional is taxable and has RMD, required minimum distributions at 72.5.
They require you to start pulling some of it at 72.5 if you haven't pulled it.
And so I'm going to begin to pull off and pay the taxes on that money as I use it. And that's basically for two reasons.
One is that account is continuing to grow and every bit of growth is taxable. The Roth account
continues to grow and none of it is taxable. Reason number two, the traditional account grows and is taxable to your heirs.
If you get an inherited IRA that is traditional or an inherited 401k that is traditional,
you have to pay taxes on it that your dad or mom left you and didn't pay.
If you get an inherited Roth, there's no taxes on it.
And so I'm going to clean out that traditional and get that tax
mess cleaned up before i start messing with stuff that not only grows tax-free but passes to the
next generation tax-free can you pull that money and immediately open another brokerage account
and start the growth over again yeah yeah i guess after you pay the taxes you could never catch back
up to your original number though now because you're down 30 or whatever yeah i mean you pull 100 grand out you lose 30k
so um you know welcome to america but there you go i mean that's just how it works all right amy's
with us amy is in huntsville hi amy how are you hello i'm great how are you better than i deserve what's up me too okay um hey i i've been
following you for over 20 years okay um i have met my husband since then had three beautiful
children i have the best blessed life in the world okay cool um we have 1.5 million in retirement account way to go millionaire
only because of you dave i didn't put any of it in there you did it
no i because they got your book in 2003 um really i've been listening to you forever
well thank you i'm glad you did it. I'm glad you won. It worked.
All right, Amy, you already know the answer to the question you're about to ask then, don't you?
No, I don't.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
The question I want to ask is we have $1.5 million in retirement accounts.
We have a pension that we are going to be looking forward to in retirement.
And we owe $145 000 dollars on the house we are
a little bit pinched for money because of the inflation right now um but we can survive without
it i want to take out money for money okay we really got that pinch for money but i want to
have more money per month okay all right i got you okay i'm
with you on that now so how old are y'all uh i am 49 my husband is 43 okay um so we still have quite
what's your household income he makes 135 a year so that's like and you i'm stay at home mom okay okay so your household income is 135
all right you owe 145 and you're in your 40s yes okay all right cool i want to know if we can pay
off the house and take the hit on the the taxes i wouldn't or I wouldn't. You're not only going to get the taxes,
you're going to get a 10% penalty.
So what's going to happen at $135,000?
You're going to lose 40%.
That's like borrowing money
at 40% interest.
Yes.
But I've made, I am actually
an active trader in our
brokerage account.
And I've made like $ like 700 000 in the last
five years in the inside the retirement yes yeah but you don't have anything that's not inside
retirement no we decide the house no yeah so you're running in uh well i mean we have like
an emergency fund yeah but i mean a self-managed you you're doing a self-managed IRA. Okay. Yeah.
All right.
But just because you can,
that's all the more reason
not to give the government
50 cents on the dollar.
Okay.
Because if you can make
that kind of money,
you can make that kind of money
instead of giving it to the government.
Now, what I would do is this.
What I would do is this.
I would stop investing
into your 401k.
Well, we do put 10%. I would stop investing into your 401k well we we do put 10 i would stop investing into your 401k well we
do that because there is a match i would stop investing into your 401k and pay off your stinking
house if you want to get the match that's fine if you want to invest that's fine but you have no money except in this retirement account
so you're seriously considering as smart as you are on everything else taking a 40 percent hit
on your money no i want your house paid off too but i'm not giving the government 40 cents on the
dollar you pull 100 grand out you send them 40 you got 60 left that stinks to high oven no no no no no no no no no no hundred times no
wouldn't do that now i was hoping you're going to tell me you're 59 and a half and i would cash it
out without the retirement without the 10 penalty i would but you're not there so anyway pay the
mortgage down with other means between now and then and if you want to slow or stop the 401k
to apply the difference to your mortgage, that would not be unwise at this stage of the game,
because your million and a half, if you just let it grow at a 10% rate,
is going to be worth $3 million by the time you're 60. And by the time you're 67, it's going to be worth 6 million.
And by the time you're 74, it's going to be worth 12 million. So you're going to be okay.
You're going to be all right. And that's if you add nothing to it.
Let me ask you this, Dave. So if my friend came to me and said,
hey, I've been self-managing this mutual fund over the last five years and i've made 700 grand if i look at all the data about self-managed funds they don't
ever work long term right i would tell my friend take your money off the table you just you had a
night you beat vegas and and dump it. Is that bad advice in this situation?
Because I feel like that's a person that's going to take that $700
and is going to end up losing it statistically over a long enough arc.
Well, I did not delve into what she's doing.
Okay.
So if she's buying and selling single stocks, yes, I would take it off the table.
I agree.
I mean, how else would you make $700,000 in five years?
I don't know what
she started with. That's fair. Okay. So, um, you know, if you doubled it in five years, that's
only about a 15, 16% rate of return. Okay. So that could be done with mutual funds if you're
very careful. Sure. Right. So maybe she selected the best package of mutual funds possible in the
last five years. That could be, but if you're buying and selling single stocks, I agree. I wouldn't do that.
I don't do it.
And I know a lot about it.
And I don't do it.
My retirement accounts are not self-managed.
They're just sitting in mutual funds cooking.
Just cooking right along.
Yeah, that's a good point.
I hadn't thought about that in her case.
So you've done really, really well.
Be careful.
Be careful. And don't, you know, let's not be giving the government half our money,
and let's not be taking big risk with a self-managed account.
That would be the two tune-ups or answers to what we think we're hearing in your situation.
And good question, Amy.
We appreciate you joining us.
The good news is, is what she said is right.
If you do follow this stuff, you'll be a Baby Steps millionaire.
It works every time, every time.
And, you know, her family situation has changed during that decade.
Her employment situation has changed during that decade.
Everything has moved.
And still, we're sitting on a maid and a half in our 40s plus a house that's almost paid
for we didn't ask what the house is worth so their net worth is presumably over two million dollars
my guess is you know we've been whenever you're traveling and you have to go to the bathroom and
you finally find an exit that has a gas station and you exit for some reason right when you exit
and you get to that stoplight and you see the gas station your body's just like all right we're
gonna go right now right you gotta go real bad and i feel like she's got a million and a half
bucks and she's right there at the edge to pay that house off and then all of a sudden it's like
i gotta pay this off right now right now right now and it's just no idea where that metaphor was
going hey let's slow down i had no idea where that metaphor that metaphor landed like a like
a sweet airplane rachel cruz metaphor right metaphor right there. Oh, my gosh.
Wow.
Unbelievable.
You've got to stay the course.
Even though you're right there at the edge,
just stay the course.
Okay.
Don't pee in the car.
That's it.
That's the moral of the story.
Don't pee in the car. This is The Ramsey Show.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions,
it's The Ramsey Show,
where we help people build wealth, do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host. Thank you for joining us.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, number one bestselling author, Ph.D. in counseling.
He's my co-host today.
The phone number is 888-825-5225.
Happy Fourth of July weekend.
Happy birthday, America.
You big, beautiful beast.
It's pretty amazing.
Brandon's with us in Atlanta, Georgia.
Hi, Brandon.
Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hi, John.
Hi, Dave.
Thanks for taking my call.
How's it going?
Better than I deserve. What's up?
The reason for my call
is my mom is
kind of giving up on her
career field and is
depending on me to
fund essentially everything
for her. Now, a little bit of
background. I don't have any brothers and sisters.
My parents divorced early on.
How old is your mother?
She's 52.
And so you're supposed to support this 52-year-old woman for the rest of her life
who doesn't want to work much um well the thing that's
happened is essentially she worked at a university she went to school got her phd and was was really
trying to break uh into the medical field with her doctorate and she just wasn't able to get a job
uh and so now you know it's going on on about a year and a half now where she essentially hasn't had a job
and was using all of her, I guess, money that she had saved.
Pretty irresponsible for somebody smart enough to get a Ph.D.
What's her degree in?
Something medical research. She was working. She actually was doing some sort of job at the CDC during COVID that was, you know, an assignment for, I think, six months or something like that.
But before that, she was working with infectious disease.
Okay.
Here's the deal.
Does she have her name on your checking account?
No. Okay. She can only get name on your checking account? No.
Okay.
She can only get money if you give it to her.
That is correct.
And so she can't take it from you?
She can't steal it from you?
She can just ask you for it?
Wait a minute.
Let's stop a second, okay?
Let's pretend that this wasn't your mom for a second.
And you're talking to
your best friend's mom who's 52 is it good for her to do nothing and drain her kid
let's talk about her. Is it good for her?
Yeah.
It's not a rhetorical question I'm asking you.
Is it good for her?
Of course not.
Okay.
Then if you assist her in doing something that's not good for her,
you are not doing good, sir.
Follow me? Yeah. You're giving a drunk a drink. I'm with you. You're giving a drunk a drink i'm with you you're giving a drunk a drink so what's happened is her heart got broken and her confidence got shaken after she went and got
her phd she thought she had a meal ticket and it turns out you still got to go out there and
shovel the ditch and and she shook up and she's lost her heart's messed up
and instead of actually re-engaging life she's trying to escape and in the process suck the
marrow out of your bones the only way forward good man is to sit down and have an across the
table conversation with your mom yeah it's good for her to re-engage life i love you and you got
knocked down hard and i'm so sorry and i'll walk with you i'll be your biggest cheerleader i'll pick you up i'll dust
you off but i'm not going to support you while you do nothing because it's not good for you
you're way too smart to waste your life away sitting and watching oprah reruns
right yeah yeah that's right and i promise you there's a job at a university for her.
And if she tries to be a travel agent for guilt trips, don't let her.
Mom, I am not an ungrateful son.
That's why I'm sitting here.
But I'm so grateful and I love you so much that I will not participate in your destruction.
I will not participate in you turning a wonderful life
into a pile of poop. I'm not going to participate in that. I love you too much to do that. I'm going
to walk with you. I'm going to hold you accountable. I'm going to dust you off. I'm going to cheer you
on. I'll call you back. I'll coach you. I'll buy you books. I'll be your biggest cheerleader,
but I'm not going to give a drunk a
drink because something knocked her out of the saddle and now she's scared of horses
she's afraid i think isn't she
yeah i don't know if she really wants to anymore to be honest well that that hopelessness
that hopelessness comes from not believing anymore
that's a type of fear
proverb says hope deferred makes the heart sick but desire but when desire comes it is the tree
of life and so if i called her up tomorrow out of the blue and said the cdc is on the other line
they want to pay you 140 000 a year can you be there monday suddenly she wouldn't have given up
suddenly she would light up like a dadgum christmas tree
so she's not done she's heartbroken hopeless and so part of your job is not to give her money
but to inject hope into her life and help her get back on the horse
and don't you dare give her any more money don't you dare give her any more money
if you want to buy some food and drop off a bag of food do that but don't you give her cash to
sit on her butt don't participate in her cash to sit on her butt. Don't participate in her
own destruction. That's the worst kind
of enabling. You're not
being nice, you're being mean when
you do that. Does that make
it sense? Because it's
not good for her.
And the
byproduct of you doing this right is it actually
does protect you.
But that's really even down the
list i would let you suffer if i thought it was the right thing to do to pour money over there
yeah it's not good for her not good for her how does this conversation go
how's it sound when you talk to her next time
um no i don't i don't have any problem really having the conversation with her Can I add a – How's it sound when you talk to her next time? It really will.
No, I don't have any problem really having a conversation with her.
I just was really wondering how to navigate it, you know,
because it is touchy for her. In person?
In person.
Holding one of her hands, you pick up the tab for the breakfast.
You're looking into her eyes and just tell her how much you love her
22 times during the thing and i love you so much that i'm going to help you get back on the horse
because mama i can tell your heart's broken i can tell you've lost hope and you you're too smart
you got a freaking phd you're too smart to waste your life away and i'm not going to stand by as
someone who loves you and allow you to do that. I'm going
to be cheering you on. I'm going to be kicking your butt. Huh? Yeah, go for it. What's up?
Could I ask you one quick thing? So currently she's moved out of her house into what my,
I have a rental property. It's the only debt that I have left. And, you know, now it went from,
you know, me being able to put extra 1500 it made towards that
mortgage to me now paying probably another seven or eight hundred out of my put a put a time limit
on how long she stays six months or six months you got six months in the house mom and then i
gotta sell it you need to put a deadline on it yeah because otherwise this goes on for 15 years
that was a bad move by the way hey hang on i'm going to send you ken
coleman's books for her from paycheck to purpose and proximity principle maybe they'll help her
get started this is the ramsey show buying a house or selling a house right now the ramsey way
makes home ownership a blessing if you do it right and if if you do it wrong, it'd be a curse.
Yeah, stay away from it.
It's a wild real estate market out there.
And the Ramsey Trusted Program is the only way to find a good real estate agent that you can trust to keep you on track with what we teach here at Ramsey and help you get the best offer on your house, find the right house for you.
We only send you to the top producing agents in the area who we trust.
We review their stats.
We interview them.
We decide which one.
And then you do the same thing, and you can pick the one you want.
Ramsey Trusted Agents have years of experience.
They didn't get their license last week.
Your Aunt Sally might be sweet, but she doesn't need to sell your house.
You need a pro.
Find a Ramsey Trusted Real Estate Agent for free at RamseySolutions.com slash agent.
Ryan is in Fort Worth, Texas.
Hey, Ryan, welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hey, Dave, thanks for having me on.
Sure, what's up?
So I'll just try and paint a picture for you guys. I'm 21, and I have been with my girlfriend for a little under four years,
and I'm considering getting married.
And she's amazing.
She's really hardworking.
The only thing is when we've had conversations previously about marriage,
I've told her that I've always thought that getting
premarital counseling is kind of necessary. Well, I guess it's not necessary for everyone, but
it's a very good idea. And she reacted pretty negatively to that. And we kind of argued a little bit about it. And she said that she wouldn't want to have another person, you know,
talk about our issues with, I guess, like a stranger, you know.
And I was just wondering what you guys thought about that.
Her alternative that she offered was we'd read some kind of book on marriage together
and kind of work it out ourselves.
It's ironically, it's an ironical irony that you're having a fight about pre-marriage counseling.
Yeah, yeah.
So, Brother Ryan, Brother Ryan.
Yeah.
Just slowly back away
when you get to the door turn and run as fast as you can
yeah here's why here's why um no couple has it figured out when they're first getting married
you at this point are unable to say,
I want to do this because it's important to me.
And if you already can't say what you need
or what you want out loud,
it's going to be tough sledding.
This has nothing to do with her.
You want to put this on like,
it's just a good idea.
All couples should do this.
You need to be able to look your future wife in the eye
and say, this is really
important to me the second thing is if she is a person who cannot hear outside counsel or wisdom
which all of us need then she's going to have a very tough time being your wife or your partner
and your co-creator of this world y'all are are going to build together. And I don't see a healthy path forward.
The Bible says in the multitude of counsel, there is safety.
There's a ton of statistical evidence.
Have you ever heard the saying, Ryan, that half the marriages end in divorce?
Have you ever heard that saying?
Yeah, I have.
It's statistically untrue, by the way.
And let me throw some numbers at you that are pretty crazy, okay?
If you get married before having a child, if you don't live together before getting married,
if you both graduate from high school, if your combined household income is going to be in excess of $50,000,
those are all
controllable variables, by the way. The controlling variables you don't have is if both of your
parents are married still, if all of those things are true, and if you share a faith together,
you're both of one faith, if you regularly attend a house of worship for that faith, if you do all the
things I have just listed, you have a 90% probability of staying married.
And part of that is, by the way, if, oh, I left out too, I'm sorry.
If you get pre-marriage counseling and if you have an engagement period that lasts six
months or longer, not three days.
And I got married in Vegas.
Okay.
So some people that get married three days after they meet, their marriage lasts for
50 years, but most don't.
So basically a good, decent length of an engagement.
You're not sleeping together, living together, having babies together before marriage,
and you have good pre-marriage counseling,
and you do some of these other basic things,
most marriages that follow that statistically make it.
It's in the 90 percentile.
But it's all the people that get all this crap out of order,
and like John said, that refuse to have any input into their marriage.
You're freaking 21 years old.
Did something happen to her, Ryan?
I'm not putting you down, but you don't know beans about nothing.
Of course you need outside help.
Of course you do.
You called us because you wanted help.
Well, Ryan does that.
Because you're wise in the multitude of counts of their safety.
I'm 63, and I need help.
A lot.
Shut up, John.
All right, so Ryan. john needs a new job i'm gonna get paycheck to purpose on the way out the door all right so
ryan like there's got to be something beneath this that's weird yeah that she gets at angry about it
so like her parents went to pre-marriage counseling and got divorced or they went to marriage counseling and got divorced anyway so it was it was her sister um and she's really close
with her sister yeah and um it wasn't the counseling that blew the marriage up it was the sister
what were you saying right that um i i was saying saying I may have come on a little strong.
Usually we talk in the car as I'm driving,
and sometimes I'll say something like,
we have to do this,
and maybe that put her on the defensive.
I don't know.
But also, yeah, the main thing is her sister.
So here's the response in a gentle way.
I'm asking you to put my needs above your sister's.
And if she can't do this now, then your marriage is not going to make it.
And right now what she's choosing to do is to take her sister's experience and put that over what you're asking but you also have to have the courage to say um i pawn this off on this is just what we're
supposed to do or this is the right thing to do i want to do this because it's important to me
yeah and if she looks you in the eye and says i can't meet your needs or i have no interest in
quote unquote doing what you say that you want
then you'll need to address your
relationship there.
That's a tough place.
Okay. Is that fair?
Yeah I think that's
I've been doing radio all day today
including my show, this show and this is my
least favorite phone call I've had to make
because I know that's hard.
Yeah.
I know that's hard.
But also –
I think I'm going to try and implement that, though,
and see if she does have any.
Yeah, I mean, it's – this matters to me.
Me too.
That's a big deal.
If you say that to your spouse and our potential
spouse and they go yeah well i don't care we're not doing it anyway and unless it's something
that's harmful i mean what what's the downside you know i mean but i mean this this is and here's
the thing that as as a as an almost newlywed that you don't see,
this will happen with the home you buy.
This will happen with the neighborhood you live in.
This will happen with the job you take.
Man, you throw kids in the mix.
Hey, it's a really big deal to me that our kids go to this church.
Yeah, it's not happening.
Like these things just get bigger and bigger and bigger.
There's an old counseling saying conflict deferred is conflict amplified.
If you don't say, hey, this is important to me that we get some counsel,
that we get people to walk with us
in this stage of our marriage,
and she says, nah, this will just,
this will turn into a nuclear bomb down the road.
And I hate that for you, man,
because I know that you love this woman.
I had very few requests of my grown children when they, when their spouse came and
asked for our blessing to get married. One of them was pre-marriage counseling. All three of
them did that. They're my kids. They need Dr. John Deloney Ramsey personality is my co-host in the
lobby of Ramsey Solutions on the debt-free stage. Chad and Natalia are with us. Hey, guys, how are
you? Terrific, Dave. We're doing great. Good to have you guys. Where do you live? We live in
Pennsylvania, close to Erie. Erie. Yeah. Okay, very good.
And how much debt have y'all paid off?
We paid off $151,405.
Wow, love it.
Very good.
And how long did it take to pay off $151,000?
34 months.
Good for you.
And your range of income during that three years?
From $142,000 up to about $177,000.
Cool. What do y'all do for a living? We're both teachers. Oh, awesome. What do you teach? I teach fifth grade. I teach middle school math. Awesome.
Very good. Very good. What kind of debt was the 151? Well, about 15,000 was our car loan and a
little bit of my school debt and the rest was our mortgage you're paid off your
house yes we did looking at some weird people right here the weirdest very cool good looking
house i'm seeing it on youtube here how much is that worth about 270 about 270 excellent excellent
how old are you two we're 50 and a paid for house baby yeah worth almost 300 grand how much is in your retirement
accounts so we have about only about 45 000 uh in our roths and then we have um a whole bunch of
money and contributions and interest that will come to us in a lump sum from our pensions eventually
and that's what we have so far.
All right.
Way to go, guys.
Good job.
Not to mention, when you die after spending life as a middle school math teacher,
there's a conveyor belt to heaven.
You just get to pass everything.
You just get straight in, man.
Kindergarten teachers, you've got to stay in line,
but you just get to go right ahead.
Wow. Spoken like somebody who taught math in middle school
nope spoken like a kid who just got a middle schooler out of math
wow way to go guys congratulations thank you okay so 34 months so 36 months ago or so
something happened how long have y'all been married 20 29 okay so 29 years you've been
bumping along but something happened and you said okay something's got to change here we're going to
get this house knocked out and these other things too what happened so um i have a friend who um
is quite a bit younger than me and so conceding to him much of anything is not something that I like
doing and so he had gotten way on board with the Ramsey business and was drinking the Kool-Aid and
and uh way down the road and I was hemming and hawing and hedging and he would just make these
little comments uh shout out to Carl Giesing um and he uh and he would say things like well that's okay
you don't have to do it but someday i'll be a millionaire and you won't
just these little just these little digs and so eventually i decided um pretty much the classic
thing of like we make too much money to be to still be paycheck to paycheck like you know I mean our incomes
continue to grow and and you know what why don't we have something so Natalia Chad comes in and
says I'm tired of Carl dogging me we're going to look at this what'd you say I was pretty much on
board the only concern that I had because we we were very poor when we got married Chad is like
yeah Chad was a missionary in Russia and that's how we met.
I'm actually from Russia anyway.
So when we first got married, we had $14 as our budget for food a month.
So when he proposed that, first of all, it was a miracle because Chad was never really
about money.
He would just give everything away and we were happy and you know
we love jesus and just god will provide and um but then it was a miracle that he brought it to me
and i i hope i was on board right away but my concern was like you didn't want 40 food budget
yeah that was my only concern yeah so yeah i'm guessing it wasn't. No, it was not. We're the classic thing that comes up a lot on the show
where somebody is the idea guy and they're all about this.
So I'm Mr. Bottle Rocket and she's just been yanked all over the place.
So I think her reservation to get on board was,
oh, this is my next thing.
And pretty much we really followed the thing where we sat down
and we had a dream meeting and we talked about what could be
and we tried to dream in Technicolor.
And once we did that, instead of what we can't do
and the fact that now we're going to be budget people,
like this is our compelling reasons why.
And once we did that, then it came together and it made sense
and we were off to the races. Love it, love it congratulations you two wow so what's the first
big thing you're gonna do now that you don't have a payment in the stinking world well the first
thing that we are doing is here yeah what's the first big thing well we're i mean we're staying
at the drury downtown in Nashville,
and this is a lot of money for us to spend.
I'm driving a $1,750 car that's called the Golden Marshmallow.
The Golden Marshmallow has got to go.
It's a 1996. That's number one.
It's got to go.
Yeah, Sable.
Anyway, Mercury Sable.
There's a picture of it.
I love it.
What year?
97?
96.
It's a 96 Mercury Sable, love it. What year? 97? 96.
It's a 96 Mercury Sable.
And you always talk about buying a two.
You just told somebody about buying a $2,000 car.
It was a $1,750 car.
And it overheats. So when it overheats, it stops working.
So he has to take it apart.
That's how you make s'mores.
An overheated marshmallow.
You could cook s'mores on the engine.
So we'll get a replacement car.
We'll get her a replacement kitchen at some point in the not too distant future.
We're going to go on a family vacation where we take other folks along with us.
Good for you.
Well done.
All right.
That's a good plan.
I like it.
How's it feel to not have any payments it doesn't
feel real to be honest but it feels so good but not quite real how old were you when you came from
russia i was 21 okay that's when we got married okay yeah and how surreal is this now this american
dream now like decades later right yeah here you sit in a house
that you completely own a hundred percent of that's got to feel a little different than it's
amazing to be honest but like since i mean we were very young we worked really hard yeah so it feels
amazing because it was not a gift it was not was not something that somebody gave it to me.
You're not lucky.
We are not lucky.
You worked hard.
We worked so hard.
That was one of the hardest things for me to watch my husband work day and night,
not just physically but also mentally, for an hour in the morning
and then for an hour or two or three at night just looking at his notes
and crunching the numbers and making plans and that was the hardest thing for me yeah beautiful
and what about these two handsome boys over here how old are these guys uh enoch is 25
raise your hand 25 and caleb is about to be 22. And so when we started this, the summer of 21, like we just like kind of on ramped toward
it, realized that if we're going to go all the way in, we need to do FPU.
And so we brought them on board and we did FPU like one lesson a day for nine straight
days.
And that was like the launch board. And so these guys have really been along for the journey.
Here's what I love about that.
That's a dad that says not only no more with me,
but that's a dad that looks at his two sons
and says no more with y'all either.
Yeah.
And that's amazing right there.
I'm proud of you for that.
One of them just bought his own first car,
all cash for a beautiful
it's a better car than yours oh it is way better it's a low bar way better anyway and the other
one uh paid for college uh debt free and and they're both living totally debt free they're
roommates and up across town it's great jump up there with your mom and dad while they while they
show that they changed your whole family tree, young man.
$151,000 paid off
in 34 months, making $142,000
to $177,000.
100% debt-free. House
and everything!
Chad and Natalia, Erie, Pennsylvania.
Count it down. Let's hear a debt-free scream.
3, 2,
1. We're
debt-free!
Yeah! Three, two, one We're debt free!
Yeah!
That's how that works Woo!
You gotta love it baby
This is the Ramsey Show
Our scripture today is Psalm 2713
I remain confident of this i will see the goodness of
the lord in the land of the living general douglas macarthur said duty honor country
those three hallowed words reverently dictate what you ought to be what you can be and what
you will be love it love it love it, love it, love it.
Happy Fourth of July weekend, everybody.
Reese is with us in Gainesville, Florida.
Hi, Reese.
Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hey, Dave.
Good afternoon.
Hey, what's up?
So my question is that I'm 25,
and I'm on disability insurance and disability payments,
and I was wondering how I could build wealth.
What's the nature of your disability, sir?
When I was five months old, I had a heart transplant.
Fast forward to 2018, I got lymphoma cancer.
Then in 2022, it relapsed again.
I'm in remission for both, so I'm good there.
Currently, I am a University of Florida student. I'm in the senior year. I plan on getting my master's, and I'm debt-free.
Very good. What's your master's going to be in?
Same thing, food and resource economics or applied economics. Okay, fine. All right. I don't know enough. I'm not good enough at medicine
to know what all that stuff means for your future and what your situation is.
What I always, when I'm working with someone that's facing a disability, the always reason
I ask the nature of it is there's a technical disability. There's meaning that you are declared disabled in order to receive payments from the military
or from a disability policy or from SSI or whatever.
And then there is, I don't know how to say this properly.
I'll just try to say it, just try to say it.
And if it's, if it sounds wrong, don't be offended, please.
Then there's the actual disability, meaning what can you actually not do?
And so if I woke up in those shoes, you've got a balance between the technical disability.
You can't continue receiving most disability checks while you go earn $300,000.
They generally cut those checks off, right,
depending on the situation.
Now, sometimes with military, it keeps going either way.
I don't know.
But if you're unable to do certain things like physical things, but you're able to use
your mind, which in talking to you, it sounds like you have a wonderful mind, a great intellect,
and you could use your mind and go have a wonderful career in spite of these limitations,
obviously, that's going to be your best route. Agreed? Yes, sir. That's actually, that was my plan,
was to go into government and do researching so that way I wouldn't physically have to do anything,
but I can use my brain to thoroughly thrive. But I'm kind of a little bit weary right now because
due to the fact that I have these ailments, I'm way more likely to get cancer again. I'm kind of a little bit weary right now because due to the fact that I have these ailments,
I'm way more likely to get cancer again.
I'm way more likely to pass away sooner than the average person.
And half of me is thinking, like, is it even worth it to save up wealth and build into a retirement that I might not ever see?
Yeah.
Yeah, it is.
But it's not worth it to have no life in the meantime
and so you you've managed to stay debt free
right yes sir and so you know you've got three things you can do with money you can invest it
you can give it and you can enjoy it and i always tell everyone you should do all three
and you should do all three um if you want to slow down on investing and have a moderate investing plan
and a higher enjoyment plan based on your supposition,
it's okay if you want to go that route.
I don't care.
The downside is you might live to be 70 and be screwed, right?
Right, right.
Yeah.
Reese, you've been given a strange gift,
and it's a gift I wouldn't wish on anybody,
but it's that you got to peer over the edge, right?
You had to sit in a doctor's office
and hear them say the word cancer.
And you were raised with one or two parents
who had a youngster with a heart transplant.
Like, you know.
And you know that millions of men and women
go to college every year
because they want to get rich
or they want a paycheck.
Or we talked to somebody earlier in the show today
that just wanted to get a job
because of the benefits.
And you have had the gift
to peer over the edge and realize,
I am not doing anything
that isn't going to bring me joy and excitement
and that I'm going to be able
to pour myself into because i know this whole song and dance comes to an abrupt it's just a
vapor right yeah and so if you love studying economics what a cool moment in history when
they've thrown all economics programs online and you can be a professor that's got incredible
compassion for students or you can be an economic researcher and please god help congress
right like you can be an incredible contributor if this is something you love to study
if you hate studying economics i'm going to plead with you your life is too short and you know and
i know it go do scope find something to use that amazing mind that's going to contribute to your
life and to everyone else's life around you.
Yeah.
So I think your baby steps are exactly the same, though.
And I think investing is always going to be a part of your plan.
See, $100 a month invested from 25 to 65 in good mutual funds and a Roth IRA is over a million dollars.
Okay.
So it doesn't take a lot so you you land a job out there with a master's
an econ making six figures you know you save 500 000 bucks a month you're gonna be a multi-millionaire
if you make it to 70 and um and none of us know when we're gonna make it right so
um but like john said you peered over the edge So, yeah, I don't think it changes a lot.
It just changes the maturity level with which you're going to be unusually emotionally mature at 25, more serious.
Yeah, and for somebody who thinks, well, I'm not going to get to spend this retirement.
What if you thought about what your mom's face looked like
when they told her your baby's going to have to have a heart transplant
and you created an endowment for moms and dads
who are facing that kind of surgery?
Or you begin to pay into something that's going to live on
long after you're gone and honor and bless families.
You get to think bigger and beyond just what kind of car am I going to drive?
You might have $10 million in an account that sets something up that runs in perpetuation.
Just that keeps going.
The endowment idea.
And how fun if I know, okay, I only got this much runway.
I'm going to make this runway count.
And Dave, there's an increasing call in some of the psychology literature about we just burn our most precious resource time and
if we all knew how precious it was man we'd get off these stupid phones and and be about
earning and loving and serving anthony in california how can we help
hey guys how's it going better than we deserve what's up so i have a question um i recently got
a new uh promotion and with that promotion came a raise.
It's about, I want to say, $7 or $8.
But by September, I'll be at a complete $9 raise from where I was at.
So it's awesome for me, but I'm not baby step two right now.
Just finished paying off most of my credit card debt.
I have about $1,000 left on one card.
And then, unfortunately, I have a $50,000 Sally May loan from school. Um, so that's kind of biting at me and I kind of feel
like I know what you guys are going to tell me. However, the thing is now that I'm at this new
job, I have to commute about an hour from where I live. Um, the gas isn't a problem. My car is
paid off and I only have to pay the insurance, but it's really old, well into over 200,000 miles.
And it's got this maintenance I have to always do.
I'm just kind of worried that it might break down on me later.
And then if I don't have anything saved up for the car, then.
Anthony, drive the beater and get out of debt.
You don't buy a car with a race.
Go be free.
You already knew that. You knew we were going to say that. You know why buy a car with a race. Go be free. You already knew that.
You knew we were going to say that.
You know why we say that?
Because we love you and we want you to win.
I want you to be able to drive anything you want to drive the rest of your life.
If you go buy a car right now, you're going to short circuit that.
And it's going to delay your financial freedom significantly.
It's so easy in Bakersfield, California to get car fever.
At every stoplight, there's cool cars.
And you're not driving one of them because you're broke and $50,000 in debt.
But someday, you'll remember sitting at that stoplight when you're driving a nice car and you didn't use your raise
to go buy a stupid car that goes down in value i love cars but financially they're just straight
up stupid there's just no way around it please don't do it anthony please don't do it and you
knew we were going to say that you just wanted us to say it so you could hear it and we did that's
what we're here for stating the obvious over and over.
That puts us out of the Ramsey Show and the books.
We'll be back with you before you know it.
In the meantime, remember, there's ultimately only one way to financial peace,
and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace, Christ Jesus. We'll be right back. hey folks dave ramsey here you know budgeting doesn't have to be boring you just need a
budgeting app that's made with you in mind and that's every dollar the every dollar app has
helped millions of people work the baby steps
and take the stress out of planning and managing their money.
Start budgeting with EveryDollar for free right now.
Just go to RamseySolutions.com slash EveryDollar and download the app today.
That's RamseySolutions.com slash EveryDollar.