The Ramsey Show - More Debt Always Equals More Risk
Episode Date: July 30, 2025📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a Free Personalized Plan Dave Ramsey and Dr. John Delony answer your questions and discuss: "How do I he...lp my grandma get into an apartment without co-signing?" "How do I best use unlimited overtime?" "Where should I keep the inheritance my dad left for my children?" "We disagree on who should pay for my mom's plane ticket when she comes to visit" "Can we afford a boat?" "How do we follow the Baby Steps while putting my husband through school?" "Should I invest in real estate before paying off debt?" "How do I break the cycle of living paycheck-to-paycheck?" "What is a reasonable financial goal after paying off my house?" "Am I wrong to feel like my in-laws are enabling my wife?" "How can I get ahead in today's economy?" "Is it okay to stop tithing to pay off debt?" "Should we prioritize a $400k remodel over paying off the mortgage?" "I have a $3m net worth but I struggle to spend anything" "My husband lost his job 7 months ago and we haven't gotten back on our feet" Next Steps: ✔️ Help us make the show better. Please take this short survey. 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 weekdays from 2–5 p.m. ET or send us an email. 📱 Get episodes early in the free Ramsey Network app! 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! 📖 Your Total Money Makeover starts here. 🧠 Explore our high school personal finance and new economics curriculum. 🏠 Find a Ramsey Trusted Real Estate Agent Connect with our Sponsors: Stop paying more and start shopping smarter at ALDI Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp Go to Boost Mobile to switch today! Learn more about Christian Healthcare Ministries Get started today with Churchill Mortgage Get 20% off when you join DeleteMe Go to FAIRWINDS Credit Union for an exclusive account bundle! Find top Health Insurance Plans at Health Trust Financial Use code RAMSEY to save 20% at Mama Bear Legal Forms Visit NetSuite today to learn more For more information, go to SimpliSafe Use promo code RAMSEY for 18% off at The Nokbox Get started with YRefy or call 844-2-RAMSEY Visit Zander Insurance for your free instant quote today! Explore more from Ramsey Network: 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💰 George Kamel 🪑 Front Row Seat with Ken Coleman 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's the Ramsey Show. We help people build wealth, do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
Dr. John Delaney, Ramsey personality, PhD in counseling, host of the big hit on Ramsey
Network, The Dr. John Delaney Show, number one bestselling author.
He's my co-host today.
Open phones here at 888-825-5225. Shawna is in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Hi Shawna, how are you? Good, how about yourself? Better than I deserve. What's up?
So I have my grandma, she's 80 years old and 40 grand in debt or more. Can't get approved to
live anywhere and has dementia, we're
working on our own baby steps, what should we do? Can't get approved to live
anywhere. No, she's been scammed multiple times and it has ruined her credit to
where no one will approve her. Does she have clinically
diagnosed dementia or is it just something you as a family toss around? She has been
clinically diagnosed with mild dementia. So she shouldn't be able to get a
checking account, I mean somebody should have stepped in as a medical power of
attorney at this point, is that right? Yes and right now it's only me and my husband.
My mom is not good for her or anybody, so she's kind of out of the picture.
So you really have two options.
One is you all take care of her, which you're saying you don't want to or can't do.
And the other option is a nursing home on a Medicaid program. Medicaid
is welfare. It's designed for people that don't have money or bad credit. And Medicaid
pays for a nursing home for anyone in America. So you have to...
Yeah, we're just concerned about that because she doesn't want to be done driving. She doesn't
think she can see her sign that's
located with a rim. Well, she'll be done driving if she goes into that, but she should be done
driving if she's got dementia and gets scammed. Yes. She'll drive somewhere and not know where
she is, honey. Yeah, that's happened already. You got a silver alert going. I mean, come on.
So I don't really care whether she wants to drive. Yeah, it's no longer an option
Okay And so then you've got to decide are you guys willing to take care of her or able to take care of her?
And if you're either not willing or not able then you know, you're gonna find a Medicaid nursing home in the area
That's got some memory care Elements to it and there's plenty of them and they're not luxury
high-rises, I can tell you that, but you know, at least somebody be taking
care of the lady because there's not anything, she can't live on her own right? She has till just recently she just sold her
house and she's making 40 grand ish in profit and we're trying to get her into
an assisted living facility. Yeah okay. And it's not going well due to her only
bringing home three000 a week.
A month, sorry.
Yeah. I mean, most of those costs that or more. Yeah.
So, um, 36,000 a year would be a deal on an assisted living.
Um, and so what is your household income, hon?
Um, we bring home about $7,000 a month together. So, is she getting Social Security? Is that where that $3,000 is coming from?
It's Social Security and Pension.
Okay. Dave, correct me if I'm wrong, but when you file for Medicare, like you have to show you don't have any more assets
or something, right?
Yeah, but she doesn't.
I mean, she got $40,000, but that's not gonna keep her
from getting qualified for this
because she doesn't have the income
to support the memory care.
But here's the thing, you keep describing someone
who doesn't have dementia.
She just sold her home, she's been living on her own,
she drives.
Is she just contrary and y'all are blaming dementia?
So right now they have been diagnosed her with mild dementia, so it's not as bad as it's going
to get yet, but it is very slowly getting worse and worse.
Mm-hmm.
So one of the hallmarks that it's devastating for families is you have somebody that
in some shape, form, or fashion, in some level of consciousness understands that their mind is
slipping out from underneath them. And that comes with an ingrained terror that all of us should understand. But what's
hard is when you make decisions that you know are best for her and she'll say
things like, I'm never gonna see my kid again, I'm not gonna be able to eat, these
people are gonna hurt me, you don't understand. And so you have to be willing
to wade through that fear, which is understandable, right?
She's losing the foundation of her identity, who she is.
And nobody wants to say, hey, I can't drive anymore, right?
And so it's wading through that and doing the next right best thing for her, even if
it's not going to be like a top notch place, but this is what we can afford or this is
what Medicare will pay for, or this is what Medicare plus our social security,
I don't know how all that works, but-
Medicaid.
Medicaid, but this is how we're gonna be able to do this,
but it's gonna come, it's gonna feel so painful for you,
because she's terrified.
And so you have to wade through that
and then go do the next thing,
and it's gonna feel like you're sending her off to prison.
It's going to feel like you're taking everything from her.
But you know, we all know, the best thing for her is to get around a group of people
that are trained to help her in these last stages of her life.
In the early stages here, it doesn't sound like she's incapacitated, really.
She's able to do a lot of things.
Is she hard to get along with and that's why you don't want her there? Or you feel like it's costing you money?
Or what is your all's reasoning you're not able to care for her or wanting to care for her?
Well, we're still on baby step one and two and we just think our marriage right now,
we don't want it ruined with her intruding. She's staying in my
Kids playroom right now, which is the very right when you walk in the door
So we just don't want her ruining like our marriage by being there that makes sense
No, I don't know why she's ruining your marriage. I don't understand
It's just her presence almost intruding
just her mere presence I
Wouldn't say that it's just
We don't feel like we can be ourselves with her there
Okay
So I would rather have you all been married. Yeah
Okay. So I would rather hear that.
How long have you all been married?
Yeah.
We have been married for two years, been together for eight just last Saturday.
Okay.
I would rather you all say, have the courage to say we don't want to take care of her.
Because what you're doing is you're blaming her.
I'd rather you say, hey, you know what, we don't want her here and we don't want to deal
with it. We don't, because the other side of this is this could make your marriage immeasurably
stronger.
But it's a choice y'all are making to say, hey, we don't want her here.
Fine.
You can make whatever choices you want.
Y'all are grown adults, but I don't want you blaming her and saying, well, if she's here
and she has this illness that's slowly going to take over her, you know, we can't lay on the couch and do what we want to do. Like,
just let's just call it what it is. We don't want her here.
And that means y'all have to be a part of making the next decisions because you
signed up to be her medical power of attorney.
So she's going to be on Medicaid nursing home. That's her only other option.
I'm back to where I started. Other than staying with you, that's our option.
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Music
Isaac's in Wyoming. Hey Isaac, what's up?
Hi, thank you for having me. Honored to have you.
What's up? How can we help? Okay, I am on stage two. I've got 55 grand in debt, 35
in a truck loan, and 20 in student. My wife's pregnant with our second kid. I, I know I'm really excited.
Um, I work at coal mine.
I think I said that, uh, I, uh, I got unlimited overtime and I'm trying to figure
out how much overtime I should do.
I'm trying to get some money to go away for the next kid.
I'm trying to figure out how to balance like not
working myself to death but getting through this, getting through this debt,
getting on to stage three. What's your household income sir? Last year I made a
hundred with overtime. Okay but that's not a pace of overtime you can maintain
through your life that's just a short sprint right? Yeah it's been like hit it for...
What do you make if you don't do overtime?
If I don't do overtime every two weeks it's about 2,500 after tax.
So about 60,000 okay.
60-65,000 so you're picking up 30 grand in overtime give or take?
Yeah of course course, yeah.
Okay.
Alright. Well, you got a lot of different things pulling at you.
You got babies and you got debt and
you know,
so you know, I don't want to have someone
build a life that requires them to work
80 hours a week for the rest of their life that's a bad life that's not that's not a life you want
to build okay so let's build a life that maybe we go through a sprint of a year and at the end or
18 months and we work like a wild man and we pay off all our debts or maybe we sell
the truck, get a cheap truck and maybe we work like a sprint of less than a year and
we're out of debt so that we can live on 65 or 70,000 or a little bit over time, maybe
80,000 but not 100 and 5 ten because you're working crazy hours.
Yeah. Most of the time I see people get burned out when two things are in play. One, there's no
light at the end of the tunnel. And like, that's like Dave said, like there's not said that to a
coal miner. Oh, I see what I did there. There is no lights underground. When there's no light at the end of the tunnel and when you don't see a purpose towards the
toil.
If you can see an end to it, then you don't burn out.
It doesn't feel like a treadmill.
It feels like a race.
And if you're doing it for a reason.
If there's a race and I know where the finish line is, you can bust it to the finish line.
But if it's like, I've got to do this for the rest of my life, oh we can't do that. That creates burnout.
Awesome.
So let's determine where the finish line is and how we're going to get there. Okay, we're
going to keep the truck and the finish line is 18 months. We're not going to keep the
truck and the finish line is 9 months. Whatever the number is, and then, you know, I don't know that you
need to save up a bunch for a child. Your health insurance is going to cover labor and delivery,
isn't it?
Yeah, yeah, most of it's covered.
So why do you need to save up a bunch for the kid?
I just heard that on your show that like usually you got to...
Oh yeah, you could push pause on this this but you're still working overtime because you still got a pile up 55 grand while the baby's on
the way
Yeah, yeah
So yeah, and and we're paying the truck down as much as we can till we sell it
That's already guaranteed that it's under value bought at wrong time was dumb. Oh, so you're upside down. Okay. All right
Yeah, I mean, so, yeah,
I think you work like a maniac for nine months
and pile up cash.
And when baby comes and comes home
and your health insurance pays everything,
then all of that cash you have piled up
won't be needed for the baby.
It'll be piled on the debt and you'll clear your debts
or get close. Okay.
Can I give you an unpopular thing to say too?
Or can I say something unpopular?
It also helps when you're married
that you know your spouse is in it with you.
And that might look like she commits
while you're literally in the coal mines
working extra time,
she commits to minimizing spending to an obnoxious degree.
And you know she's got her skin in the game too. She commits to minimizing spending to an obnoxious degree.
And you know she's got her skin in the game too. Or she's a full-time home economist squeezing every nickel.
Every nickel or she takes two kids from the neighborhood
and does childcare in the house.
Even if it's just a little bit of money,
but you're looking for a partnership here.
Like we are both in this thing.
And man, you'll find that you get new wind in your sails when you got that. Yeah you can if you can push through and
you can see the end to it and you've got a good partnership then you don't get
burnout. Yeah and both you and I've been there. Yeah right I've done that.
You work like a maniac forever. 16 hours a day but you can't you don't it's not
it's not sustainable. Right. You have to have a way to get through that. And
so in our case, we were growing a business. And so we had to get the business have enough
revenue coming in that we could hire people to do some of the work so I could go home.
Yes. But also I remember, Dave, times when I didn't feel like Sheila and I were on the
same page and I was working like that, and
it added weight to that work I was doing.
But I knew we were perfectly aligned.
This is going to be 24 months or 36 months of work of full-time, going to grad school
full-time, doing stuff on the side, working at night times on the weekends.
And I also felt lockstep at home.
Man, that made that so much easier.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Jason's in Phoenix. Hey, Jason, what's up? Hey Absolutely. Absolutely. Jason's in Phoenix.
Hey, Jason, what's up?
Hey, good morning or good afternoon, guys.
How are you guys doing?
Better than we deserve.
How can we help?
Hey, yeah.
So me and my wife, we're currently working through the baby steps, and we're on baby
step number two right now.
We have three children, a five-year-old, a three-year-old, and a one-month-old. And
we also have a nephew who's six months who's going to be involved in this too. And so my
grandfather, he's not doing very well. And he recently had a big falling out with my
mom and she's an only child. So because of the falling out, he's decided to pretty much
forego everyone in the will and give all of his
money to his great grandchildren, which would be my three kids and my nephew.
It's a total of about $80,000. Um,
and he's adamant that the money is for the great grandkids.
He doesn't want anyone to touch it except for the great grandkids.
And he has kind of trusted me to see that through. So my main question is,
is, uh, we've been kind of researching like opening
up custodial brokerage accounts for these kids.
Correct.
So my main question is, should we open up like the custodial brokerage account? We looked
into the 529 also, but we just...
You don't need 529s. Your custodial broker will be fine. But it's not a brokerage account.
You just need to open some mutual funds as a custodial account
Just pick out some good growth stock mutual funds. You're in charge of the account until they're 21
These are called an UTMA
UTMA
Uniform transfer to Miners Act
Miners are not allowed to have
Contracts in the United States and so they can't open a bank account
allowed to have contracts in the United States. And so they can't open a bank account,
they can't open a mutual fund.
Parents can open one with the kid's name on it
and it makes it feel like it's the kid's,
but there's always an adult over 21 that's the custodian.
Yes, that's correct.
So you're always gonna be the custodian
and when they turn 21 the money is theirs.
So yeah, I would just go to ramsysolutions.com
and click on SmartVestor
Pro, sit down with one of the people we recommend in the investment world. We don't sell investments
at Ramsey, but we do recommend people that do. And they have the heart of a teacher,
they can sit down and I would just pick a simple couple of mutual funds that are good
growth stock mutual funds and just put the money in there and then just forget it until
they're about 12 or 14 and
then I would start teaching them about investments and how they work and I would start letting
them know that the money is there.
Do not surprise them with a lottery ticket when they turn 21.
That creates an idiot.
Okay, I'm not sure exactly when to bring that up.
Yeah, you bring it up as soon as they are emotionally able to process the fact that
the money is there and you bring it up well in advance
Because they're not in control and they can get over the I just won the lottery
Because they didn't it's not that much money
Yeah, it's not enough money to change their life. Okay, but it will grow
It'll probably be doubled by the time or a little more by the time they get to 21 so
And probably double twice actually, but yeah
But yeah, you know so yeah, you're gonna have a couple hundred thousand bucks or so a spread out among four kids, so
It's good. It's a nice thing and also have pop be sure he tells everybody
What he has done.
He doesn't leave it to you to tell them after he's gone because they're all going to be
pissed at you.
Yeah, he puts you in a bad position, man.
Yeah.
Hey guys, if you're going to make somebody mad in your will, have the courage to do it
while you're alive.
Don't leave it to the people behind to do it because everybody gets pissed off at the
wrong person then.
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L is in Charleston, South Carolina. Hi, L, how are you? Hi, Dave. Hi, Dr. John. I just want to say,
y'all keep encouraging me and helping me get through maternity leave. So thank you so much
for taking my call. Sure. How can we help? Yes. So my husband and I, we're on baby step six.
We are both active duty military and we have two kids. We live far away from my family. They live
on the other side of the country. And my question is,
should we continue to split and,
and or pay for my parents plane tickets to come visit us?
My parents, they come out probably like seven to 10 times a year,
just to help us with the kids and to connect with us.
But we've been splitting their plane tickets and just kind of wanted your your perspective. Are they broke? They're not in a great place financially. I don't
know their exact finances but I'm getting signs that it's not good. Just
with some of the things that they say. Yeah. Because it's unusual that
grandparents have their kids pay for the ticket to come see
the grandkids.
Yes.
My husband says the same thing.
Most people would just buy an airline ticket, come see their kid.
You know, I mean they don't think anything about it.
So there must have been some reason that we were doing this is what I was trying to figure
out.
I'm not saying it's wrong, I'm just saying it's unusual.
Yes it is. I think it could, and what I think it goes back to when I was a little kid with my mom,
if I really wanted something, she would say, hey, I'll split it with you,
and that's how we would do it. And so I think we've just been continuing kind of doing that.
So now when she really wants something, you split it with her. I'm so confused. I'll tell you this.
I moved away from my job, me and my wife moved away
from her parents and my parents, our families.
And so I have still to this day have some guilt.
And so I put that on the table early on.
I'll file out there.
They have never come out seven to ten times a year
Right because I know I'm in it for a couple of plane tickets a couple times a year
Which is fine. You sound like you're in it for thousands and thousands of dollars, right?
It's it's expensive
They fly
Probably like 300 of 500 dollars every time they come out. They fly southwest, so they
fly pretty cheap, the cheapest that they can to keep it kind of affordable. They're
not going first class by any means. But yeah, they are spending a lot of money.
Okay, number one, you shouldn't do this if you're doing it out of guilt.
Correct.
Number two, you should not do this if you are being manipulated into it.
The only reason you would do this is if it's an act of generosity.
But you used to split stuff with your mom when you were a kid because she was trying
to have you have some skin in the game when you're buying something.
That has absolutely nothing to do with this.
Okay, gotcha.
That was her parenting you on your purchases need to do with this. Okay, gotcha. That was her parenting you on
your purchases need to have a cost, but now her purchases need to have a cost.
So I unless you guys need the child care help and this is your way of funding
your child care help is to have them come out more. It's unusual and I
want to know why I'm doing it. If it's just an act of generosity or we've
always done it that way that doesn't that doesn't work for me that's not good.
We are doing this because mom and dad are broke and we really want them to
come out and we have the money and it's an act of generosity and both you and
your husband are in agreement on it that that would be the
only way you keep doing this and I kind of don't think that's what's going on
here you kind of think you all fell backwards into this and it's just weird
and your husband's calling it is weird yeah yeah and then it turned into two
or three times and now it's ten times a year. How many times is it really?
Is it that many?
So the first year that our first one was born, yes, it was.
She had actually 10 times out here.
It slowed down a lot more.
Obviously, we're only halfway through the year, so she's probably been out here like
four or five times.
And I think to the counter to that is my husband's parents, they live three hours up the road.
They're able to come visit.
Yeah, but that's not how this works.
That's not how this works.
It's not a tip for tat.
It's not a...
Because your parents are from...
If they live next door, it doesn't matter.
Yeah.
You know what?
It's not your job to keep it balanced and equal.
Your parents are choosing to live where they live.
Daniel's in-laws live in Kansas City.
We live 30 minutes from Daniel.
He doesn't pay for their airline tickets.
Gotcha.
And doesn't feel any need to, by the way.
And so, you know, it's just unusual.
Now, if you guys want to do it,
but I kind of think that the way you're describing it,
your sentence structures and everything, is leaving me with you are unsettled with this. want to do it, but I kind of think that the way you're describing it, your
sentence structures and everything, is leaving me with you are unsettled with
this, you're uncomfortable with this, and your husband calling it out makes you
double uncomfortable. Yeah, I think you hit it on the head. And if you're
uncomfortable, that's what's bothering me. If you call me up and went, I want to
do this as an act of generosity, it gives me great joy and this is awesome. I would go, yeah, you got the money, go ahead,
that's fine. It's not a big deal. But there's something rattling around with you that this
doesn't feel right. And your husband just said, oh, the emperor has no clothes.
That's exactly right. And he's sensing his wife is not whole on this deal. And he don't want to
go along with something that you're feeling uncomfortable with. Yeah that you're feeling forced into
there's a little guilt-tripping of some kind going on. Yeah. So I think we
restructure it. Let's have it just a reset. Jump on the phone and go mom we're
looking at this and we're working on some stuff in our budget and so we're
not gonna be able to fund your airline tickets anymore. Yeah. We love you and we
hope you can come as much as you want to come. You're more than welcome. We're not
trying to run you off but we've got some other stuff
we're trying to do for the kids college funds and some other stuff with this money and
Gosh, I hope it doesn't cause you too much trouble
But if you're ever hungry or anything, let us know we'll get you some food
But but we're probably just gonna change that we have a reset on this and just tell your husband that they're probably gonna sell their house
And to say hey, we're moving to Charleston
That has happened before
So
One time we had a team member
many many years ago over 20 something years ago that misbehaved and
We several of the leaders we were together and we're like, and every, we
went around the room and we're like, okay, I had a bad feeling about that guy.
And that guy's been kind of weird.
There was something weird about that.
There was something weird about that.
Eight months ago I was thinking to myself, that was weird.
Something weird about that.
And one of the other guys, one of the other leaders spoke up and said, okay, we have a
new rule at Ramsey.
If everyone feels like something,
if anyone feels like something is weird,
it's probably because it's weird.
So let's just say, if I get a weird vibe off this guy,
I should probably just go, that's weird.
I get a weird vibe.
And then if seven of your colleagues say,
no, they're great, then.
They're not gonna walk away from it.
But usually if you feel like something's weird, it's because it's weird.
There's something weird, that's right.
That was the point.
Can I celebrate your marriage?
Because your husband had the courage to say, I sense something not well in your soul and
I love you enough to put on the table and say, we don't have to keep doing this.
And he was gentle about it.
Good for him.
He's like, you can even call Ramsey and they'll settle the debate is what our call screener says. So we get to blow
the whistle and put on the striped shirt and be the referees. But yeah, he's a good, I
like our husband. He's a good dude. Okay, good stuff. So yeah, if something doesn't
feel right, guys, it's generally because it's not right. That's the point. And it's good to have wise counsel to bounce that off of.
Yeah, yeah. Multitude of counsel, there's safety. But yeah, it's a good decision-making tool
to trust your instincts. That's God's Spirit inside of you troubling your waters, troubling your stomach, you know? And it's not actually you have a
physical, physiological reaction to something around the subject of money. There's a reason.
It's not random. Your body, as you say, your body's talking to you or God's Spirit is using
your body to talk to you or whatever it is, however you want to get at it. But that's
this, I had a feeling. Well, yeah Well yeah, there's a reason you did.
Yeah.
It's because you're taking in all the data and some of it is just below the surface and
you don't even realize you're taking it in.
It's like sometimes when you read someone's body language and they go, so what's wrong?
Nothing.
Well no, something's wrong.
No, it's not.
Here's what I do in my own life.
I did this the other day.
When you start feeling like something doesn't feel right,
write it down so you can look at it.
And that has a way of clarifying it.
Oh, that's not that big of a deal.
Or, oh my gosh, my body's right.
When I wrote this down, it really looks stupid.
Get that out of your body and onto a piece of paper
where you can examine it.
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If you're tired of living paycheck to paycheck and feeling like you can't get ahead, join one of our free Every Dollar trainings.
There are new trainings every week this month and they're all hosted by one of our Ramsey
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We're going to show you how to stick to a budget and even find about $9,560 of margin.
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You can ask questions during the live Q&A, so it kind of turns it into like this show,
but better because you can actually get through
Sign up for free at Ramsey solutions.com slash webinar Jennifer is in Tampa, Florida
Hi, Jennifer. Welcome to the Ramsey show
Hello, thank you for taking my call. Sure. What's up? I love the every dollar app. Well, thank you
Appreciate the endorsement. Very cool. How can we help
today? I have a question. My husband, us as a family, we would like to buy a boat
but my husband feels guilty because he feels like he's taken away from the
future, from our future. Well you would be but you'd also be, you'd also have a boat. So that's the trade off. I know, I say buy the boat. So A, can you pay cash?
Yes.
OK. B, how much is the boat?
$55,000.
And what's your household income?
We're about $175,000.
OK. And what are your two cars worth?
We just owe $5,000 on a car.
No, I said what are they worth?
Oh, I think it's probably worth around $35,000.
One car?
His truck, yes.
What is the other car?
Other car's business.
Doesn't matter.
How much is the value of the car? The car's
probably worth 20,000. And you own it? Yes sir. Okay, all right. So the reason I'm
adding these three things together is yes I would still buy the boat. I'm
confused as to why you have enough cash to pay 55,000 for a boat and still owe
5,000 on a car. Why would that happen?
I know, I say pay it off but he's like the interest rate is so low it doesn't matter.
No one ever got rich with low interest rates on a car payment.
I know. That's absolute bogus bull crap.
On a stick.
So write a check and pay off the car today and then buy the boat.
That's what I would do and I wouldn't feel guilty at all.
Now here's the thing, you're paying cash. The rule of thumb is this, A, can you pay cash and B,
all things that you own with motors or wheels added together should not be more
than half your annual income and this does not violate that. Got it. Okay.
Alright. Because you've got too much invested in things that go down in value.
Boats go down in value 100 percent. Okay. Cars go down in value 100 percent.
Sea-doos, snowmobiles, lawn tractors, big tractors, little tractors, green tractors, and red tractors go down in value.
That's a children's book by Dave Ramsey. I'm just saying. Green tractors and red tractors go down in value
That's a children's book by Dave Ramsey. I'm just saying
Just trying to make sure I got all the tractors covered because the number of times I've talked to someone with
$15,000 owed on their John Deere riding mower makes me want to throw up. Okay, so it's all riding mower So yeah, you don't borrow money on that and owe more on your John Deere riding mower than
you do on your wife's car.
But Rednecks might do that sometimes, so I'm just saying.
Hey, that is a good children's book called It Goes Down in Value by Dave Ramsey.
The Red Tractor and Green Tractor.
It's all goes down in value.
Yes, I would do this.
Now, are both of you want to buy a boat and he just feels guilty?
Well, he really wants to buy a boat boat and I really want him to be happy. So yes, we both
Don't make you happy boats make you sad. No friends with boats make you really happy. Yeah, I know he loves fishing and
Where's hard in so?
Yeah, yeah, I do have another question if you don't mind, okay
I do have another question if you don't mind. We have money sitting in the money market right now and I don't know if that's our
best way to invest our money.
I hear a brokerage account?
Should we transfer that over?
Brokerage accounts are often used for people buying and selling stocks and we don't want
to get into that business. But I would buy some mutual funds instead of have money sitting in a savings account.
You're going to make a lot more money.
So my extra money above emergency funds and above money I've got set aside to purchase
something with in the near term like a boat, the extra money I have would go into good
growth stock mutual funds. So like the last two years I made 23% 25% the
average those only about 11% but it's a whole lot more than 4%
yes so yeah get with a Ramsey smart go to Ramseysolutions.com and get with one of our SmartVestor pros
and don't miss out on these stock market run-ups because that way you're getting the advantage
of all the stuff going on in the economy that's positive and the media is so hell bent on
not printing anything positive that people forgot to look up and go, oh the Dow set another
record, oh the Dow set another record, oh the, the Dow set another record, oh, the Dow set another record,
oh, the S&P set another record,
oh, the stock market's at an all-time high right now
at this moment.
So yeah, and it's been doing that for a while.
So yeah, you don't need the $200,000 sitting in there
at 3% and calling that investing.
It's not, it's saving.
And you don't wanna save more than an emergency fund
or more than near term purchases like Christmases and boats.
And I'll tell ya, I got a friend named Dave
with an awesome boat and a couple of Sea Doos
and I'm a happy guy.
You don't have a boat.
Yeah, they break.
Just everything that, the more stuff you own,
the more repairmen you have to know.
And boats are, know and boats are
Yeah, boats are expensive. I fish a lot and I've got a pedal kayak so I feel like I'm gonna work out
I'm a fished in at the same time
You know you can go down to the ace hardware and buy a little stainless steel screw
That's an inch long for penny and a half two pennies, but if you buy it and it says on it for boats
It's four dollars. Why is that and if it says it it for boats, it's $4.
Why is that?
And if it says it's for an airplane, it's $62.
So it's the same stinking screw, by the way.
So if it says Marine on it or aircraft on it,
the price changes.
So, but it's still a little stainless steel,
Phillips head screw.
That's still what it is.
So I'm sure if you use that screw
and somebody repairs your boat,
you violate the whole warranty.
The whole thing goes to yeah
Well, you it'll probably sink. There you go. It'll probably sink. That's probably not so but anyway
Yeah, you're going to spend money on
Everything that you own
So the more stuff you own houses boats, whatever the more repairmen you have to know
So these things come with a cost. They take up your mind space
to maintain them and they take up your wallet space to maintain them. There's nothing wrong
with that. Just make sure you can afford all of that, not just the purchase. Because the
purchase is just the beginning. And you certainly can't justify it based on the per pound $55,000 divided into the number
of pounds of fish you catch in a year would not be a good purchase price on the fish.
I tried to do that once with fishing poles and all the gear.
No, it's devastating.
Yeah, it didn't work.
Do it with hunting gear too.
You can't kill enough or enough rabbits.
Well, I'm going to disagree with you on that.
The spreadsheet I made for my wife clearly shows that in 2035, I'll have netted out.
You will have broken even on hunting gear after 42 years.
After 42 years.
And by then, of course, it won't even work.
So you have to have another one.
That's the way it works.
So, yeah, good rule of thumb then.
Let's put that back out there.
If it's got wheels or a motor, it goes down in value.
Add all that together and don't have more than half your annual income invested in things
that go down in value.
It's very difficult to prosper doing that.
And don't use the word invest in front of something that goes down in value.
I invested in a boat.
No, that makes you look stupid.
And stop making stupid financial decisions based on, quote, I have a good interest rate. I'm so
sick of that. It just means I'm paying the bank less of my money every month to make them wealthier.
That's just dumb. Especially when you have $55,000 in an account right there.
Yeah, you pay cash for it.
Yeah. Just pay off the car.
Pay off the car by the nightfall.
I'm not big on husbands and wives making deals, but that's a good deal
Tell them go buy the boat, but you got to pay the car off today. That'd be a good move
It probably would be a terrible move, but I would do that in my house
Hmm. Yeah, I'm not big on them making deals like that cuz that'll come back to haunt you it will it will be another one
Come around there'll be something else going yeah, but you remember that time. I did that deal with you
Yeah, that's your turn to make a deal. No, this is the smart thing
for us to do is to buy a boat. We can afford it. The smart thing for us to do is to pay off the car
and let's get going. And that's smart. It's not smart to keep a car financed. There's no scenario.
None. You know, one of the first things I discovered working in the financial world is how absolutely devastating it is when the breadwinner of a family dies and there's too little life insurance or
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instant online quotes or for a more personal touch give them a call at 800-356-4282. 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 Delaney, Ramsey personality, number one bestselling author, host of the
Dr. John Delaney show on Ramsey Networks is my co-host today. Rachel's with us in Salt
Lake City. Hi Rachel, how are you?
Good, how are you? Better than I
deserve. What's up? So I'm wondering how we can apply the baby steps and get my
husband through college. What's he taking? So he's going into software engineering. Okay, and why would he be in college for that?
I thought that was the last place I would go to learn software engineering.
Really? Yeah, really.
I got a whole bunch of them, like 300 of them that work here. No? No? I have 300 of them that work here. They went to code school.
Okay. They didn't go get a four-year degree. The number of
them that have four-year information systems degrees is almost zero. Now a few
people that do cybersecurity stuff at a real high level go get a four-year
degree, but to be a software engineer you don't need a four-year degree. Matter
of fact, it's a lot of it. What you take is a waste. So why is he doing that?
That is the best thing I've heard in a long time. What? She said she's crying. That is the best thing I've heard in a long time. What?
She said she's crying.
That is the best thing I've heard in a long time.
Oh, okay.
It's good.
Why are you crying, hon?
Oh, I'm just like super scared out of my mind.
What are you scared about?
My husband is trying very hard to support our family.
We have three kids, and I have no education to warrant more
than minimum wage. Disagree with you wholeheartedly on that assessment.
Education does not give you anything to warrant anything. All it does is give you
tools to do a job. But this idea that you've got the idea that a degree
is a ticket into a club that you're
not worthy to belong to called success, and that's not true.
There's very little correlation to that.
That's the old thing from the 50s and 60s where they sold everybody to go into college
loan debt because if you don't get a degree, you're never going to be anything.
And not true.
So what is he doing now?
He's attending university. That's it. So he's in school full-time? Yes. And doesn't
work? Yes. How are y'all eating? We have access to a 529 account that has $30,000 in it for us to use towards education.
Yeah, and that's how he's paying for his tuition.
How are you buying food?
A food stamps.
Yeah, you're not scared about...
Yeah, geez, man.
You're scared because your husband's not working for the family.
Why did he quit his job?
Yeah.
What was he doing before he quit?
He was working at a customer service representative.
All right, let me just...
I'm going to be as bold and as I can.
I worked a full-time job as a dean of students. I also was an
adjunct professor at two different universities and I ran around with police
officers in the middle of the night as a full-time doctoral
student. Why? Because I had a family to provide for and I had dreams of things
being different in the future and that meant I couldn't just cash out on my responsibility to take care of my family. He can't either. You don't get to put
your kids, the three kids on food stamps so you can go get a degree. Wrong answer.
No, he needs to go to work and he needs to stay up all night doing his
assignments at his coding school that have, you have 30,000 bucks that will
cover the cost. He can go to code school while he works
a full-time job or two full-time jobs or three you are right to be terrified
because your husband's cashed out on your family right now you and the three
little kids and I would tell him that if he was sitting right in front of me
okay extremely irresponsible how him that when...
Play this clip back to him.
Have him call us.
Dude, you're irresponsible.
There you go.
I just said it for him.
Here's how it has to start, honey.
You have to sit down and say, I'm scared to death.
It's not, but listen, it's not a dream.
He's living.
It's a nightmare.
Okay? It's not a dream, he's living, it's a nightmare.
Your primary focus on this planet is not to self-actualize and feel good and, I want to
live my dream, I want to live my passion.
So cry me a whambulance.
Weeeh.
Seriously, you go get a job and you feed your freaking kids first.
Before we talk about your dreams, whee! Okay? And then you work 16 hours a day
and make sure everybody's taken care of, and then in the middle of the night I wrote the
book Financial Peace. From 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. is when that book was written.
And that's when I wrote my dissertation, at 10 p.m. till 2 a.m., till your face falls
asleep on the keyboard.
Yeah.
And you get up the next morning you go to bed.
And I had little babies upstairs asleep and a wife upstairs asleep, and I would get three
or four hours of sleep and I would get up the next morning and go to, oh, work while
I was building my dream of financial peace. So, no, this is a bad plan, darling.
It's a bad plan. There's so much wrong with your plan that's unbelievable.
I think the problem is it's not her plan. I know, I'm sorry, his plan.
So, okay, look, number one, let's just start with the fact you don't need a
four-year degree
to be a software engineer. Boop! Right there, okay.
That just short-cut, hey,
that gets, it's a short in the on-ramp. And you've got a 529 with 30 grand in it. You paid for it.
There you go. Yeah, yeah. Bethel, is that the people? Bethel Tech's got programs, yes. Bethel
Tech has programs for the, I don't know if they're still an advertiser. They advertise with us for a
while, but they're good people. I've met with them. They do a good job teaching coding. We've sent people from Ramsey there to be taught coding.
And so you can become a software engineer.
You start out Dev1, you keep working your certs,
and you get to Dev2, Dev3.
Dev3s will make a couple hundred grand right now.
Okay, maybe a little more.
But if you wanna move all the way into cybersecurity,
you'd probably get up to a half million.
But that's a different level.
But you can go out and get a software degree that's much more than better than, I mean,
software, go to code school and write enough code to make a whole lot more than you would
as a customer service rep.
But you don't cash out on your family.
To do it.
To do it.
You do that and.
And that's just part of being a
star. I just wanted to make my dream. You don't want to smack your dream. You turn it
into a nightmare for everybody else. Oh, God. And then your crying wife has to call us and
say, help, please. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's how you tell him. You play this
back. It won't be pleasant for him. It's okay. We're in the business of telling people the
truth because we love them. And we want you to win for him. It's okay. We're in the business of telling people the truth because we love him
And we want you to win. We want him to succeed. We want you to succeed. Let's lean on this too
Just because you don't have a degree doesn't mean you don't have to make minimum wage. That's absolute bull crap.
You have to make minimum wage. It's not true. Bull crap.
And it may be that you got to get a minimum wage job to get money in the door right this second
But you're looking all the time after that job and you're gonna find yourself
Listen minimum wage is seven and a quarter target if you just show up and breathe and bathe will pay you $20
Okay, that's how that's the qualifications to work at Target. I don't think that's right and breathe
That's it. You make 20 bucks an hour and minimum wage is seven and a quarter.
So that, no, you're not minimum wage. You know what makes a summer party great?
Good friends, cold drinks, and great food.
But you know what can bring the party down?
Spending way too much money to make it all happen. And that's why I get my summertime grocery
halls at Aldi. They've got USDA choice meats, fresh organic produce, and all the stuff you
need for an epic or low key backyard barbecue without breaking the bank. There's no better
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location, product availability taking my call. I'm
a big fan of yours. Well thank thank you. How can we help?
Well, I'm going to be inheriting about six hundred eighty five thousand dollars and
I
have a debt of
162 thousand for my mortgage at two point nine percent fixed and I also have a
23,000 dollar mortgage. It's horrible. And I also have a $23,000 mortgage.
It's horrible. It's 8.09%.
And I owe 13,000 on my car at 2.9%
fixed.
And I also need to put maybe up to about a hundred grand in my home
on repairs, not, you know, gingerbread stuff, things that it really needs.
So my question is, do I pay off all those debts or some of them? Oh, my goal is with
the money, I want to buy real estate, become a landlord again. So my question is, do I
pay off all those debts before I buy property and then use the property to pay off the debts
or do I pay off all the debts or some of them and then go and buy a property which means I would buy a
lesser value property if I pay off all the debts.
Yeah. Well, I mean you started the conversation you're a big fan so that
means you've listened to the show. Right. And a hundred percent of time you know
I'm gonna move away from debt, right? Right. And the reason I do that is that I have learned that several wonderful things happen when
I am out of debt.
One is the quality of my life goes way up, the peace in my life goes way up, the quality
of my relationships are increased because the stress is down everywhere in my life.
Very few people get to tell you what to do when you don't have a mortgage.
It just changes everything. Yeah, thanks to you I paid off 50,000 a credit card. You're making progress and you know the reason you did that is the freedom that goes with it
and then of course the mathematical side of the equation is that when you don't have any debt
that goes with it. And then of course the mathematical side of the equation is that when you don't have any debt, you have money. Because all the money you're paying the stupid
bank now is yours. And so I have used that money once I was debt free to build up an
account and buy a piece of real estate with it. And then build up an account and buy a
piece of real estate with it. And I've got an LOI right now out on a big commercial property
that I'm going to develop if it goes all through. And so I got it under contract tied up while we're
doing the due diligence on the property right now. But it'll all be cash and we'll just,
and then when I have another piece of real estate that I paid cash for that's making money,
I make that much more
money and then I make much more money and it snowballs in a positive direction.
So all of that to say, the math and the peace and the spiritual aspects and the relational
aspects all lead me to tell everyone to live this wonderful life that I've had the privilege
of choosing to live which is
not having any payments owed to a single person. Oh no man nothing but a debt of
love. And so that's how I live and it's a great life. So I highly recommend it to
everybody. So what would I do if I woke up in your chisel? I'd write check pay
off everything. You know the interest rate on my mortgage is zero. I
don't have one. So I'll beat mortgage. So I pay it all off and then pay cash for with the money that's left a nice
little rental property somewhere to get started and or save up some more money
and add to it so you can buy a little better rental property. I don't care. I'm with you.
I like real estate but I pay cash for it and I've grown my real estate portfolio this time
much slower and
It's a little bit hard to get you know
I've done detailed in-depth research and a hundred percent of foreclosures occur on a house with a mortgage
Is there any Dave is there any formula that exists that says
So is there any Dave, is there any formula that exists that says once you pay off one house and you save up and pay the second one with cash, how the diminishing time it takes to buy the third,
the fourth, is there any, is there any formula for that? It would just be a spreadsheet. You're just
running those cash flows out because it would depend on the properties and I guess how expensive
a place you're buying. Yeah, yeah and what the returns are, you know, how well you rent it,
how good a job you do manage it,
and all that stuff.
But basically, I mean, if you're buying houses
and you're gonna start that way, okay,
once you've got about five houses,
think about the cash flow on five properties
with no mortgages, you can buy about a house a year
out of that, you know, after that.
So you'll make enough on those. If you just don't consume the rent money,
the rent money all goes into a kitty to buy the next one, right?
And when you got six, you can do it even faster. When you got seven, you can do it even...
If you got ten of them, you can do it real fast. And so...
If you'll be patient the first decade you get into this,
the decades two and three and four can snowball on you in a positive direction.
In a positive snowball. Yeah, good.
It gets bigger.
Every time the snowball rolls over, every time I've got more properties, I've got more
cash coming in every month and I can buy another one faster and another one faster and another
one faster.
Every time it rolls over, picks up more snow.
That's what we're talking about.
But having the patience when you want to be doing real estate and everybody on Tic Tac
is telling you you can get rich financing it up to your eyeballs and some goober on Instagram has rented a jet and says that that's
my jet and I did it. It's not even his.
Right.
He just pointed at it and rented it. Rent a Bentley for the day and doesn't even own
one and just to do a photo shoot to say
I sell real estate courses and you buy that crap then you're gonna go broke.
I mean I did and everybody that does that stuff goes broke and so the only guy making
money on all that's the guy with the rented Bentley selling you a $3,000 course for the
weekend to buy real estate and nothing down.
On the bank it gets rich on you.
Yeah, exactly.
And you just, 100% of the time, more debt equals more risk.
Less debt equals less risk and increased cash flow.
So you want a sustainable quality of life, wonderful, peaceful.
I mean, we have horrible things that we go through with some
of our rental properties from time to time, but none of them are associated with paying
a payment. It's all just the stuff you deal with when you're dealing with people doing
stupid human tricks. But it's just part of the process. Olivia is in Orlando. Hi Olivia,
how are you?
Hi, how are you guys?
Better than we deserve. What's up? Hi Olivia, how are you? I'm good. How are you guys?
Better than we deserve.
What's up?
All right.
So I'm not sure where to start exactly.
I'm on the rice and beans diet now like you guys suggest and doing, working on all the
right stuff.
I literally just started this last week so I'm new to budgeting and everything.
I've gotten all my debt and everything.
I want to do the snowball, the debt snowball,
but I have a couple questions about where I should start.
Okay.
So I know that you guys,
so the debt snowball is to start with the highest balance
regardless of interest rate.
Lowest balance, lowest balance.
I mean, lowest balance regardless of interest rate, sorry.
Lowest balance. Lowest balance.
I mean, lowest balance of interest, right?
Sorry.
And I have a couple things that are in collections, so should I?
Are you paying on them?
No, I don't even know how.
They're just sitting there.
No, they're just sitting there.
You're not paying on them.
Yes.
Don't put those in your debt snowball.
Okay.
Wait till you get the stuff you're paying on paid off, then you're going to have a
lot more money because you don't have any payments at that point, and you can call them
up and offer them a lump sum settlement.
Okay.
And get it in writing.
Okay.
But don't set those up on payments and don't pay on them at all until you get this other
stuff cleaned up.
Next question, real quick.
What do I do about my car?
How much do you owe?
About $6,783 is my payout.
What do you make?
Let's see, monthly I take home about $2,200.
It depends on the pay week.
Because my hours differ.
How old are you?
23?
26.
26, okay, what are you doing?
Yep.
What do you do for a living?
I'm a medical assistant.
Okay, you need to look for a job.
Yeah, ASAP.
You're starving to death.
Yeah, you're starving to death.
And you need to look for an extra job in the meantime.
And your car is fine, we just need to get paid off.
But you're one of the reasons that your budget is tight is you don't make any money kiddo.
You're starving.
And so we're going to increase your income with short term part time jobs right now.
And then you start looking for a new job.
You're worth more than that.
And you hang on, we're going to help you.
I'm going to put you into Every Dollar.
And Kelly, I wanna sign her up for the webinar too,
so that she can be with one of the Ramsey personalities
and see how to do the budget.
I wanna teach her how,
because she's ready, she's willing,
and let's help her do that.
Put her in Every Dollar as our gift,
and then make sure she's in that webinar this week. If you're buying or selling a home with all the clickbait ads that are going on and all
the garbage on the social media, all you get is drama.
Let me tell you, when you're looking at an unstable, weird situation, facts are your
friends.
So, when you're dealing with real estate right now, you need facts, not opinions, not your
broke brother-in-law flipping out because he thinks he can't buy anything and all that
stuff.
Instead, you need to know what's actually going on.
Okay?
And we've got the data for you.
You can go to RamseySolutions.com slash market and you'll be able to keep updated on what
is actually happening in the market. For instance, as of this moment there's 1
million 82 thousand 520 homes on the market in America. That is the highest
inventory since 2019. Demand however is higher than the inventory and so house
prices have not gone down, period. They have not gone down, they've gone up. The
median home price this month is up again and it's $441,000 right now in America
and it was less than that last month and it was less than that the month before and it
was less than that the month before.
So that's what's really going on.
Interest rates are hovering just a 15-year fixed is 5.95, just below 6%.
And that's not a bad interest rate unless you compare it to two.
But if you compare it to 12, it's half.
So it's not a bad interest rate.
And plenty of times the real estate market has boomed at 9, 10, 11, 12%.
And you get above 12, it starts to slow down.
But the market has moved at plenty of times with higher interest rates than this.
And so it's not a bad thing.
And by the way, when it comes to real real estate you date the rate and you marry the house
So you get the right house at the right time at the right price and if rates go down you refinance
And or you just pay off the mortgage and then you got a zero percent. So there you go
Ramsey solutions comm slash market you can keep up with all this Anthony is in Myrtle Beach. Hi Anthony, how are you?
I am great and I think the facts is my friend
and actualities is a very good lead in for this call
and so I appreciate that
because that's what I'm looking for.
I'm looking for facts and actualities, not dreams.
I'm looking for some goal help.
Okay.
Here's my situation.
I guess I'm on step seven. I told you screener that we
don't have kids. So I guess I got a lowered a lowered step there. But so that said, debt
free, I've got about 250,000 in cash. 300 I would say 450 between my wife and I in our 401ks. Now that our house is
done, we're looking to find an investment help and we have been looking at your suggested
investment advisors. The problem is that I'm getting a lot of feedback that I don't know I'm not an investor.
And what's happening is I'm getting feedback like, oh, we'll make you a multimillionaire.
And I get guys that are like, well, if you can't put away $30,000 a year, you might as
well eat cat food.
So I don't know what the real number here is.
No, wait a minute.
Ramsey trusted SmartVestor pros did not say that no no to be fair they didn't what I'm trying to say though
Is there's a lot of range there because what they're asking me is what are your goals?
And I'm like I'm 53 my wife is 60. I don't know what my goals are. That's what I need help with
Well, it's
Congratulations, you've done very well.
What is your home worth?
I would say right now somewhere between $4 and $4.35.
Okay, all right.
And what's your household income?
With my wife and I, probably in the area of $200.
Okay, good for you. Well done.
All right well we you know what I would suggest doing at that stage is to max
out all the keep the government's hands off your money programs 401ks Roth IRAs
do everything Roth that you can do and because that's all gonna grow tax-free
and you're gonna discover when you get
to be my age, 64, that you're not staring down the barrel of a 72 and a half year old
mandatory withdrawals, RMDs, required minimum withdrawals.
And so if you're in Roths, you don't have that.
If you're in a regular traditional she did
So I'm gonna I'm gonna move everything towards Roth. I'm gonna spend some money to do that
I'm gonna put new stuff all in Roth 401k's Roth IRA's
I'm gonna max out everything keep the government's hands off of it now
But as far as the amount of money I'm aiming at as a goal, I never set a certain amount
I just said I want to build wealth
and so that I can do three things in my case. One is a good man leaves an inheritance to
his children's children. You don't have kids, but you're going to leave an inheritance to
someone to be a blessing. Number two is I want to be outrageously generous and I've noticed that to be outrageously generous
you have to have outrageous amounts of money.
And so let's do that.
And then three is I want Sharon and I to be able to do whatever we want to do.
And if she wants a car, I can just go get a car.
If she wants to go to freaking Croatia, which we just did. It was wonderful.
We loved it and she really loved it and we did it.
And so didn't think anything about it.
I want you to be able to do some stuff like that, right?
When you're my age, that's 10 years from now for you.
So you wanna be able to enjoy the money,
to be generous with the money,
and to leave a legacy with the money.
And that's the only thing you can do with the money.
There's only three things you can do with it,
is give it, live it, and invest it.
And so, I'm gonna invest with that in mind.
But yeah, you should have, making 200 a year,
maxing out everything for the next 10 or 15 years,
plus the, you know, you're already a millionaire roughly,
or probably are a millionaire actually, with all the numbers you gave me, you are, yeah, you know, you're already a millionaire, roughly, or probably are a millionaire actually
with all the numbers you gave me.
You are.
Yeah, you are.
Good.
And so you should have your net worth approach $10 million.
That's where it should go.
But why, and the only reason why is so that I can do good with the money for me, mine,
and others, you know? Money's not good for anything just piling it up,
but it's good, it's really good when you can do good with it,
and that includes doing something nice for your wife
who put up with you all these years, and that kind of stuff.
Yeah, okay, so it makes sense.
Okay, so I'm looking at this too much from a,
when I'm asked that question, what are my goals?
I'm looking too much at it almost like an actuary.
My goal is to build a big ol big ol pile of wealth with steady investing
That sounds good. I didn't think of it that way. I automatically went right to the numbers. Yeah, that's a good thing to do
There's nothing wrong with that and then you know
But just run and then run the numbers out and go okay
If I if I fully fund my Roth my 401ks and I fully fund, and I'm making 200k, you're gonna max out everything,
by the way, you'll be able to max out your 401ks,
you'll max out your Roths, all that.
You know, if I fully fund all of that
and I do another whatever, then here's what we'll be,
and we're gonna consume the rest of it.
We're gonna enjoy it.
Very good.
Yeah, and so, and run those numbers out,
and you're gonna see a $10 million number.
That's what you're going to see when you run that number out.
I'm pretty sure.
I didn't run it on a calculator, but I'm pretty sure I'm right.
Here's what I love about that, Dave.
You've been teaching that for three decades now.
You and I both are our buddy James Clear.
I love the way he framed it, which is reverse
engineer an identity, not a deadline. And so we both know people who get obsessed with,
I've got to have a million dollars. Well, you sacrifice joy, family giving, you become
a monster in pursuit of this thing. If your identity is, I'm a guy who builds wealth,
who enjoys my life, and who gives
a ton of it away, you will end up far surpassing this white knuckle goal thing you are obsessed
with.
That's why it's always so humorous to me when someone says, well, you can get a million
dollars, but that's not enough. And I'm like, enough for what?
For what? For what? That's right.
That's right. It's not as much as I'm like, enough for what? For what? For what?
That's right.
It's not as much as it used to be.
Right.
I mean, when everybody started celebrating millionaires the first time, Monopoly was popular.
It was the 1920s.
The go-go roaring 20s before the crash and the Great Depression.
Millionaires then, that'd be like having 12, 14 million now.
Or maybe a little
more. And so, there's a lot of money then. But it's still a lot of money.
But now if you have paid for a house.
And it's still more than most folk got.
Right, if you have paid for a house, covered.
Still more than most folk got.
You got money to eat, covered. Now it's just about who are we going to be?
Yeah, who do we want to be? And really that's what you're aiming at all along.
First thing though is sustainability.
Yeah, that's who we is. The
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Today's question comes from Matthew in Ohio.
Matthew writes, my wife and I are in our 20s
and we're on baby step two.
My in-laws make good money but are in a lot of debt.
Whenever my wife goes shopping with them,
she always comes home with something she has hinted to me
about wanting that they purchase for her.
Am I wrong to feel as if my in-laws are enabling her to continue bad habits by purchasing what
she wants without practicing patience herself? She knows they are in debt and what was purchased
was most likely put on a credit card."
Hmm. Dave, I'm torn on this one, because here's what I'm hearing.
Hearing two things.
One, I'm hearing a husband that wishes he could buy his wife stuff and he can't, and
so he wants to shut the whole thing down.
And also hear a husband who wants to be the parents of her parents and dictate how they
do what they do and when they do it for their child. And he's also wanting to parent his wife that's right also be the father slash
mother about her like she's just like she's a 17 year old daughter and she's
developing bad habits hanging out with her mother yeah I'm sorry I don't like
that yeah so I mean if Matthew if you and your wife sit to get together and
say hey we don't want to we don't want to support our parents' bad money habits and so we're just going to stop taking stuff,
we're going to stop letting them buy things for us, you can do that.
Let's reframe the position that your wife is in, okay?
Your wife is not your child.
Correct.
And the two of you as two freaking grown-ups should sit down and talk about this.
Honey, it bothers me.
Your mom and dad shouldn't be putting crap on a credit card that they can't afford that are buying us stuff we can't afford. It's
bothersome to me. Does that not bother you? As a grown woman, you should be able to look
at your mom and go, no, I can't afford this. You can't afford this. We shouldn't be doing
this. Honey, we need to talk this through. You need to be on that page. He needs to get with his wife and raise
her up and involve her in a noble discussion rather than a tactical, I'm going to tell
you what to do discussion.
That's right. And the second thing here is what gets me most frustrated with Matthew
and with her. Matthew, you're really frustrated that your wife wants something, and if she can't get
you to get it for her because y'all can't afford it, she's going to go manipulate her parents into
buying it for her. What you seem to be upset here really is your wife's attitude. And so sit down
and have that conversation. That's what I was going to say. Yeah. Yeah. And I would be too.
Yeah, absolutely. I would be too. It's like we are on a plan because we are trying to get out of this and your mom and
dad are screwed up and we don't need to add to their debt to circumvent the fact that
we're working on this and be making purchases that frankly this household doesn't even be
making right now.
And so, you know, no, there's so much wrong with this whole situation, but it's not framed
in you've got the high ground and the parents and your wife are all need to be brought into
line.
That's not it at all.
It's that you and your wife need to be in, go visit a place of nobility where the two
of you as two adults decide what is best for your family. And I do not think that your
wife is building bad habits here, other than the bad habit of running to mommy.
Well, I was going to say, I would be willing to bet money that this is not the only place
when she doesn't get what she wants from one place, she'll go and figure out a way to get
it somewhere else. And so, Matt, it's being honest about what is beneath the money question here.
Brock is in Knoxville. Hey Brock, how are you?
Good, how about you?
Better than I deserve. How can I help?
I got a weird question that's kind of specific to me. I'm 23. I'm a huge fan of yours. I've known about you for a long time. I saw you on the Sean
Ryan show. That's something I watch all the time. And I just want to say I'm a huge fan
of how you are unashamed about letting people know that God has done great things for you.
That's something that I really admire and I look up to and hope that I can be that way
someday. But the specific question I have would be, I guess, um, I'm kind of
at a clean slate in life right now.
I'm 23.
Um, I'm about to go back to school.
I'm going to trade school, um, for IT.
And, um, I've been in debt for like my whole adult life.
Since I turned 18, I moved out.
My parents got divorced.
So I moved out.
Um, and I'm just now dug myself out of that hole for the most part.
Um, there's some blessings with dug myself out of that hole for the most part. Um,
there's some blessings with family members and things like that. Um,
and I just want to know, you know, someday when I get out of this, uh,
this year while I'm training and I'm, I'm making some type of decent money, um,
I plan to have a part-time job while I'm in school. Um,
what can I do to prosper? Because up until this point, it's been hell.
Um, I've tried to take care of myself, me
and my fiance just struggling by on a full-time income the best we can but it's just like
wages aren't proportionate to the expenses of everyday living anymore so I guess that's
my question.
No, that's not true.
How can I prosper?
That's not true. Wages are definitely proportionate to the expenses of everyday living. Your wages maybe aren't.
But wages in general are. Lots of people prospering out there.
We had rented for a long time and…
You're 23, you haven't done anything for a long time.
Yeah, yeah.
You're talking too old guys, man.
Yeah, I feel old. I do. I feel old because I've been in traffic for so long.
You've been through a tough patch and you're fighting through it. I really like your moxie
I like your confidence and how you're leaning forward until you went sideways with me there on the
the
Thing you like you're somehow listen you're you're you are taking the steps to control your success
You control your success. There's no boogeyman in the economy.
There's no boogeyman in capitalism.
You control your success.
And what you figured out is I'm not making enough money
so I need to go get some training to make more money.
Good for you.
Well done, sir.
So you're going to code school for a year, right?
Yes, sir.
What do you make now?
I do a cyber security at UT.
Awesome.
Currently I'm unemployed.
Why?
So I actually just, I just moved.
So her family.
You just moved from where?
From Maryville to Oneida, Tennessee.
And you're going to the University of Tennessee?
Well no, I'm going to be going to TCAT for a year and then I'm going to do a few months
of coding training at UT.
It's like a boot camp thing they have that I plan to do afterwards. After my TCAT is up, I'm gonna go to UT. That's the plan.
My goal is to have every certification I can get so that when I go looking for a job, I have no issues finding one.
No, you just need enough certifications to get a job. And as a matter of fact, you can probably get that now.
You gotta be doing something right now.
When are you going to work?
So, like I said, I just moved recently.
I had to quit my job because it was going to be like a two-hour commute.
I was working at a credit union down there.
And I quit because we moved so far.
And I was like, you know, I'll take care of myself.
Marival is not a two-hour commute to Knoxville.
No, no, no.
I'm saying I moved to Oneida. Why? I moved from our commute to Knoxville. No, no, no. I'm saying I moved to
Oneida. Why? From Marriville to Oneida because that's where my fiance's family
is from and they offered us the ability to move into their trailer, rent-free, no
house payment. So we gave up our $2,700 a month house payment in Marriville where
I'm from to move to where she's from and although you know... Yeah, but Oneida or Knoxville is a commute dude, that's a long way.
Yeah, it's like 50, 55, 10 hours, something like that.
But yeah, that's my goal and I've been looking.
There was not a two hour commute anywhere in this story, what happened? I'm so confused.
Okay, so I'm sorry, I know it's a lot. It's been a...
Where was the two-hour commute?
From Knoxville to Oneida.
Yes.
There was a commute to go see her mother, but not to work.
I work in Madisonville. I work in Madisonville. So I drove, I would have had to drive from
Oneida to Madisonville every day. That's the two-hour commute.
Oh, I see.
So that's why I had to quit my job because I couldn't drive from
Ohnott to Madison over there. It just wasn't realistic. You quit your job to go get a free
trailer. Now you don't have a job. Yeah, yes, sir. Okay. But the plan was, here's why. We were so
struggling to get by in the house that we lived in because it was so expensive. It was a $2,700
a month payment and with everything else we have going on, it was just hard for us to get by paying this payment.
And they said, hey, you can move in.
Yeah, so the tail's wagging the dog, though, dude.
You quit your job.
You could sell the house and not quit your job.
You sell the house and stay in that end of town, that end of the country, and keep your
job.
Now you don't have a job.
You set your feet on fire because your head is high.
You traded your job for a trailer rent with your mother-in-law.
So that's what's blowing my mind here.
No, honey, the way you're going to prosper is you're going to go back to work, okay?
Now.
Now, while you're going to school, full-time, you're going to work full-time.
I worked 40 to 60 hours a week in Marriville when I was at the University of Tennessee
and I graduated in four years.
I was sick and tired of being sick and tired, bankrupt with a toddler and a brand new baby
at home, scared doesn't even begin to cover it, but I got mad enough to change. I started
using God's and Grandma's ways of handling money. That journey became the Total Money Makeover, a plan everyday people can use to take control of their
money. Millions have changed their lives following the plan in this book and
found hope. Start your makeover today at ramsysolutions.com slash store. 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. Open phones
at 888-825-5225. Dr. John Delaney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today. He's the
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You've got to be sure you check it out.
PhD in counseling, open phones at 888-825-5225.
Mike's in Seattle.
Hi Mike, how are you?
Good sir, how are you?
Better than I deserve.
How can I help?
So my wife and I, you know, we got ourselves, it was mainly my fault, I'll be completely
honest about that.
Mainly, you know, I'm the spender in the marriage.
We got married about five years ago now and, you know, I kind of, I wrapped up some credit
card debt and we've been trying to pay it off.
The only thing we've done right during this entire time is we've earned a lot and we've
tithed consistently the entire time.
Right now we're tithing about $3,000 to $5,000 a month.
We earn anywhere from $300,000 to $350,000 a year, but we just cannot seem to get ahead
of this debt thing.
So I guess my first question would be, how does God feel about me not tithing and using
that extra $3,000, $4,000, $5,000 a month to try to get out of debt?
I don't think you have a 10% problem.
I think you have a 90% problem. Okay. You're horrible at managing money. Yeah,
for sure. I mean, you make $350,000 and you're broke. So 10% doesn't fix that. I mean, I can
tell you how God feels about it, and I will sidebar that in a few minutes, but let's actually deal with what's going on, because 10% doesn't fix it.
How much debt have you all got?
In credit cards, we've got like 43.
I've got 45 on a Tesla and probably 30 left on a Ram. Okay. All right. And then, you know, our mortgages probably,
it's like 505 we've got left.
Yeah. I said, we're in about $3,000 a month.
Why don't we get rid of two $45,000 cars?
Yeah. And I knew, I knew you'd, I knew you'd say that Dave.
My whole thing is, you know, I'm in construction
and I probably drive more than anyone you know.
I drive about four, easily 4,000 miles a month.
And I was doing that with a traditional gasoline.
Were you working in Canada?
No, no, just all over the state, just all over the state.
Yeah, I probably drive six, seven. No, no, just all over the state. Just all over the state. So you're destroying a $30,000 ramp.
Oh yeah, I've had it a year and it's probably like 50,000 miles on it already.
Yeah, so you're destroying the value rapidly.
Oh for sure.
That's a bad business decision.
It is. It is. So I don't even know where to start.
I do. I just started and you sidetracked automatically. I just told you.
How much do you bring home a month?
$350,000 a year, $25,000 a month.
Yeah, yeah, it's about that. I bring home about $20,000.
Okay, but hold on. Let's say you have a $1 a month truck payment. You got a thousand dollar a month Tesla payment
That's two thousand. It's twenty three thousand dollars left. I
Know where's it going? Then you got a house payment for half a million dollars. Let's say it's seven thousand, right?
And you're down to what?
23 minus seven was that sixteen thousand dollars like what are you doing with this money? I
minus seven was that $16,000. Like what are you doing with this money? I don't know.
You can't even blame the debts.
See, that's where God's concerned. He's not worried about your tithe. Those that are faithful,
if you want to be spiritual about it, we'll talk about what the Bible says. When you're faithful
with the little things, you'll be given more to manage. And you've not been faithful with
what you've been given.
And so listen, you're building a house. If you built a house this shoddy it'd fall over.
Yep. Yep.
Okay, so you've got to get it, you and your wife need to sit down and say,
all right, we've been too blessed to be this sloppy. We're going to start managing this money.
We're going to make this money behave. And in the midst of that, we're going to make this money behave and in the midst of that we're going to make some decisions about purchases and paying off debts.
But $110,000 gets you out of debt.
You could be debt free in a year if you bothered to live on $200,000.
So that's all it takes.
It doesn't take the tithe is not blocking you mathematically.
What's blocking you is the other 90% that's
not being managed well. So let's get on a written plan. I'll put you into every dollar,
the premium version, and you and your wife sit down tonight and you all start a plan
where you spend every dollar on paper before the month begins and you start making the
money that you have behave. Here's what's weird. You will get peace immediately once you get on top of this
money instead of it being on top of you. This all this disjointed chaos is robbing
your peace. And you mentioned a couple of times I'm the spender and
you mentioned regret and shame
and those kinds of things.
That stuff goes away when you just decide, those emotions, negative emotions all go away
when you just decide, me and my wife are grownups and we're going to tell our money what to
do and we're going to look at God and be proud of how we've managed what he has blessed us
with.
And then the tithe is not an issue anymore because you're going to clear the debt and
tithe and you're a hard working dude. You're a very productive guy. You don't have any
trouble making money. You just have trouble keeping it. And dude, I don't want you to
look up 10 years from now and go, hey, I made $3 million in the last 10 years
and I got nothing.
Yeah.
That would be like having the worst hangover ever.
Yeah, and that's where I'm headed.
Yeah.
So other than the every dollar budget,
should I be selling everything?
Should I go that route as well?
You may need to,
but I think what you gotta do more than anything else
is get your monthly cash flow under control, and if you can't redirect enough of that to clear these
debts and start living on less than you make, then you've got other issues.
Can I ask you-
Because you make a lot of money.
How's your health?
It's terrible.
Okay, here's what you need more than anything, okay?
Yeah.
Because this doesn't happen in a vacuum.
You're a guy who's lost trust in himself.
Yep.
And you don't need a hack.
On this issue.
Well, on your health, on your weight.
You've lost trust in you, haven't you?
Yep.
Yes.
And you've tried to achieve that with a dollar amount in a bank account and it hasn't made
you feel whole.
What you need more than a hack is, as my friend Lane says,
stop stepping over $100 bills to pick up pennies. You need a steady, like a steady,
consistent display of discipline for nobody else but you to begin to prove to
yourself that you're worth feeling good. I'm gonna walk a mile in the morning,
I'm gonna eat less, and I'm gonna make my money behave, and I'm going to walk a mile in the morning, I'm going to eat less, and I'm going to make my money behave, and I'm going to be in agreement with my spouse on all of these things.
And dude, that's going to change everything for us.
It will change everything.
And by the way, God doesn't need your tithe.
He has you to tithe because it's good for you to learn to be a giver because it's part
of who you are.
You're made in His image and He's a giver because it's part of who you are. You're made in his image and he's a giver. And so
he has us to tithe to remind us that part of our created being is one of generosity.
That's why we're tithing. Not because he needs your money and not because he's going to punish
you if you don't or you do tithe. None of that. But you're tithing for that reason to
continue to flex the generosity muscle.
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ramsysolutions.com slash bundle or click the link in the description if you're on YouTube or on a podcast Hillary is with us in Huntsville, Alabama
Hi, Hillary. Welcome to the Ramsey show
Hi Dave, hi John. Thank you so much for taking my call. Sure. I'm a little nervous. So, um, okay
We are trying to figure out if we should
Sell some properties to either pay off our mortgage or do an addition on our house.
Okay.
And we owe at the mortgage is $3,500 a month.
And what's the balance?
The properties, it's $500,000.
Okay.
All right.
And you said do some work or do an addition to the house. What'd you say?
Yeah, we so we sold our house and hunt spill four years ago
And we moved into one of our properties we paid off five rental properties that we own when we did that
We moved into one of those properties for about eight months, and then we found our
Forever home. I want to say I know you
guys hate that term but our dream home on Lake Gunner's bill purchased that for
seven hundred and fifty thousand and so we're trying to figure out
500k on a seven hundred fifty thousand dollar purchase and you want to renovate the home you just
purchased? Well we do well it's a big sixer upper. So we bought it. It's on
the lake. It's on the water. But yeah, it needs a lot of work. What kind of work
does it need? Well it's about 2,000 square feet. We've got three kids. It's
just, it's in 1960s. Just it needs an updated kitchen. We're sharing a bathroom.
So we would just love to have some square footage.
All of our properties are paid for.
Okay, and the houses in the immediate proximity sell for what?
Just two houses down, a household for $1.7 million.
And it's a two-bedroom home.
It's a lake house. So yeah, okay. All right. Okay, so you're gonna spend how much on all
this renovation do you think? It's about $400,000 is what we've been quoted after
our architectural drawings came through. Okay, and what are your rental properties
all worth? Well, our net worth, the only debt we have is in the house, and our net worth is about
$2.5 million, with the house included.
Okay, but you got $250,000 equity there, so that means you have rental properties worth
$2.25 million?
Well, actually, so the rental properties are worth yes, just right around 2 million.
Okay. So sell a million dollars of them and pay off your mortgage and fix up your house.
Okay. Okay. I didn't know if it would just be a no no to do the renovation. Um, because
we all worried about taking that monthly
pay cut I guess. We bring in about 19,000 right now. I'm not worried enough
about it to not borrow 400 grand. Well we weren't going to do both. We were just
going to try to figure out okay should we sell a property or two to do the
renovation but would that be smart to do that while I woke up in your shoes
and you know you've already set the terms of surrender here the terms of surrender are
you bought a lake house and you are going to renovate it so that that's like those are givens
that's not going to be undone there's nothing in this description that left any of that on the
table to be undone drive don't drive you nuts i'll just tell you because you're spending almost as
much on the stupid renovation as you don't purchase of the house which tells me you the table to be undone. Don't drive you nuts, I'll just tell you, because you're spending almost as much
on the stupid renovation as you did on the purchase
of the house, which tells me you're gonna be up a creek
for a long period.
Drywall dust is your new breakfast, okay.
So, yuck.
But anyway, you're doing this.
So, I think you're selling a million dollars
worth of property, and you're paying off your mortgage,
and you're 100% debt free, and you fix up the house that you're living in
It's why you guys have worked and done all this
You didn't work and do all this to be landlords you worked and did all this to have a place to live that you like
and have a good quality life and no borrowing or
Deciding not to borrow not deciding not to pay off my mortgage so that I can do the renovation
It's the same thing as borrowing to do the renovation
Right, right. You're just moving the pee under a different shells all
So it doesn't do any good. So yeah, you've you've if I'm in your shoes
I'm just gonna sell a couple these rental properties, you know get down to a million dollars
Then you're gonna million dollars worth of rentals. You're gonna million dollar house a million to house
I hope me and five house. I hope if you take 750 and you put 450 in it I pray god it's worth a million five after you're done
well the comps in the area for a finished home for the one seven for the one down the street
yeah but but I mean you better you better be that you better be as nice as it is when you're done
right right so, yes.
And you guys have done enough construction that you have an idea of what you're getting into, I hope.
Yes, we've actually fixed up all of our rental properties ourselves.
Okay, yeah, because this is going to be a, this is not a small task you're taking,
and these are the kinds of things that people do where they bust budgets,
and they add, and the scope creep
As you go along and all of a sudden your 400 ends up being 600
Okay, so you lay out a detailed you lay out a detailed
Construction budget and a detailed construction timeline and a detailed blueprint and you manage to those three pieces of paper
And you do this renovation professionally on time, on budget and to plan.
Don't make it up as you go because you're going to end up six or seven hundred K.N.
You know how that works, right?
And we do have, I forgot to mention, we've got one hundred and eighty thousand in savings
as well.
Well then maybe you've got a seven hundred,000 property you sell then. I don't
know what these properties are worth individually, but I would just look through and find enough
of the rental properties with my $180,000 to pay off my mortgage and to do my renovation
with cash. Okay. Because you're going to do both and you might as well just do it and
then use your increased cash flow because you don't have any mortgage
payments anymore to save up and start talking about buying another property at
some point if you want to move back into another piece of real estate at some
point with cash but we're out of debt we're gonna stay out of debt we're gonna
work our way that's the point of having a two million dollar net worth is to get
to get to do the stuff you want to do and so I you know I'm more concerned about my home at this point now your homes would be 1.7 yeah your house
can be a lot very high percentage of your net worth be over 50% of your net worth that's a little
scary that's a little scary with your old net worth. So you guys are heavily invested in the Stinking Link deal, I'll just tell you.
It's getting close to being crazy.
What would you like to see, Dave, on a breakdown of somebody's net worth?
You got a $3 million net worth.
I mean, I don't want more than a million dollar house usually.
Okay.
And she's going to be at a million seven.
Yeah.
And she's, you know, and it's going to, the other million three is going to be the real
state that's left.
Other houses, yeah.
And the other stuff.
And so we've, we plowed it all into our single family personal residence, which does not
generate revenue.
Right.
And so you've got too much of your net worth tied up.
Now if your net worth is a million dollars
50% of your net worth going into your house is one thing sure but when it's three million it starts to be
No, it doesn't feel great. What is a rule of thumb for the higher your net worth the smaller the percentage of your net worth? It needs to be a one asset your your home should be is there a rule of thumb on how much you should
Expect to go over on a renovation
this big? I don't expect to go over a dime. I lay out a detailed budget and a detailed
plan. I mean, I just built a several million dollar house last year and it was 2% under
budget and it was two months early. So, and I used a contractor, he did a great job, but
we managed to the budget and we managed to the schedule and we managed to the
blueprint. So scope creep is that's the decorators thing, we don't do that. Listen, your home is your most expensive asset and now you're ready to sell, fast and for
a lot of money.
But in this wackadoodle real estate market, one mistake could cost you tens of thousands of dollars. Here's the deal. This ain't amateur hour. You need a pro in your
corner, someone who knows how to price your home right, market it well, and negotiate the best deal.
That's where a Ramsey Trusted Real Estate Agent comes in. To find one near you go to ramsysolutions.com slash agent. That's ramsysolutions.com
slash agent.
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Michael's with us in Louisville, Kentucky.
Hey Michael, how are you?
I'm doing terrific, Dave. I'm calling you guys today because I've got a serious spending
problem, and I hope you can help.
Okay! Tell me about it.
Well, a little background. I've lived a very frugal lifestyle and I've accumulated a little
wealth, but I'm at the point in my life where I can afford to spend it, but I have an emotionally
a hard time buying things that go down in value like a rock.
And I'm torn because I'm entertaining the idea of spending $100,000 for something with wheels.
Good.
How much money you got?
What's your net worth?
That's about $3 million.
Okay.
What are you talking about buying that's $100,000?
A recreational vehicle.
Okay.
That's not much for an RV. Well, I currently have, it would be
a hundred thousand above what I currently have invested in recreational vehicles. I have about
fifty thousand invested in recreational vehicles. Okay, so you would trade in one of the, you trade in the
fifty thousand and put a hundred cash with it? Yes. Okay, so you're going to buy an RV.
What are you going to do with the RV?
I'm going to travel.
Good, good.
Okay.
Are you single?
No, I have a wife and she wants you to travel too.
Good.
But I have lived so long using the live on a list and you make savings.
Yeah, good for you.
Do that sort of thing.
Paid off.
And you started with nothing.
You didn't inherit this money, right?
I inherited zero.
So you got three million dollars.
How old are you again?
I'm 78.
Okay, all right, cool.
I started the Dave Ramsey method about ten years before you invented it.
Used to be called common sense, didn't it, Michael?
I just didn't have enough sense to make it into a radio show and become more wealthy.
All right, so the rule I use from an emotional standpoint or a spiritual standpoint, if I stand before
God, am I being irresponsible with the money He entrusted me with?
Number one, that's the spiritual side.
Emotionally, how can I deal with this?
And it helps me if Sharon's wanting to go on a nice trip or wanting to make a purchase
that based on my old life would have been very weird to purchase something like that.
For you, that's $150,000 RV. It feels weird because it's not a muscle you've ever used
before.
One thing that's helped me with that, I look at two things on the responsibility side. Number one, is my generosity good? Am I giving? If I'm
giving, and we give carefully a lot more than we spend. So we don't have to publish that
from a PR standpoint or a publicity standpoint, but if I'm giving and I'm being generous, then it's okay for
me to also enjoy some of what God has blessed me with.
Okay?
And the second rule I use is the burn the money in the middle of the floor rule.
Okay?
So if you took $100,000 and lit fire to it, your net worth would be 2.9 million. Your life would not change one ounce.
It doesn't change my life a bit. That's exactly it. And so that means it's not irresponsible.
Dave, I've never earned more than $50,000 a year in my life. and yet I've accumulated. You're amazing. That's amazing. Well, I always
tried to buy things that were not money pits. And it worked for you. It worked for you.
An RV is like a boat. It's a money pit. But dude, you have earned it. Get you and your
wife a good RV and go for a ride, baby. It's time to change.
How did I do it?
It's not a change.
You just look at it.
You say, if I burn this money in the middle of the floor, if this is the worst mistake
I've ever made in my life, it does not change our life.
It doesn't change a thing.
And here's the thing I want you to do.
I want you to tonight, by yourself, write Michael, 88-year-old Michael, a letter,
and say, Dear Michael, I'm so glad as I wrap up my life that I've got all this money in the account
and I've got no experiences to show for it. And then I want you to write Michael another letter
at 88 years old and say, Dear Michael, me and my wife left no tread on the tires
those last 10 years.
And you read both of them to her and then that make,
you'll be at the dealer in the morning.
And you'll be on the way to Kentucky tomorrow evening.
Get in that RV and go have an adventure, my brother.
Yeah, proud of you.
Very well done, sir.
And for the rest of you listening, that is a completely
different conversation than, well, I'm going to live while I can, and I'm going to spend
while I'm young. I don't want to get old and have... No, that's someone who is spending,
they're burning so much money in the middle of the floor that it is affecting their life.
You know, they're spending money on travel
that they don't have.
They're spending money on cars that they don't have.
They're spending money on things they don't have.
The difference is, Michael has the money.
The thing Michael's short on is time.
Go. Yeah, go do it.
Go do it, go do it while you can.
That's right. And, you know,
run it, baby, run the Go do it while you can. That's right. And run it, baby.
Run the gauntlet on the thing.
And so that is not the same advice that I would give to a 22-year-old who's broke.
Because it's not the same.
Oh no, live your life, enjoy your life.
That's an immature person making an excuse for buying crap they can't afford or doing
things they can't afford to do.
And that's a completely different conversation, although it sounds like the same result, but
it's not.
It's a completely different direction.
That's what we're doing.
So the point is that you – he's right, though.
We run into this with folks who have built a good net worth very often.
You're spending muscle atrophies because you don't use it.
You're never spending money.
And so then when you do try to spend money, it's hard emotionally.
It strains you.
And he's being honest.
He wasn't making up a joke.
That was the true thing.
And he's never made more than $50,000.
He's $3 million.
Yeah.
At 78 years old.
So tell me that it can't be done.
Of course it can be done.
It, this thing called success,
this thing called wealth building.
It can be done.
And so, and the odd thing is when we studied,
when we did that millionaire study that we talk about in
Baby steps millionaires book that out of the 10,000 millionaires that we studied
One third of them which was surprising to me have never had an income over a hundred thousand that really shocks me, too
I would have guessed
You know some high percentage 50% never had an income over $200,000.
I would have guessed that.
But not one third never made in their working life $100,000.
And yet they're millionaires.
It's a steady.
It's a steadiness.
It's a steadiness.
It's a steadiness.
Time and consistency.
Time and consistency.
This is where money comes from.
That's where health comes from.
That's where weight loss comes from.
That's where good marriages come from.
You mentioned clear earlier on Atomic Habits
and our buddy James, and he says,
doing the little thing every day,
the cumulative effect of that is a lot more
than doing a big thing once occasionally.
That's right.
And that's true in investing. It's thing once occasionally. That's right. Yeah.
And that's true in investing, it's true with relationships, it's true with exercise.
It's like you hear that like, hey, I bought her a whole bunch of flowers.
Man, every day did you just help with the dishes?
Just do that, just do that over and over and over and over.
Shut up, John.
And over and over.
I did, I did last night.
I helped with the dishes last night. He did. I really did. I
didn't a long time ago, but now I do. Our scripture of the day, Galatians 6, 4 through 5, each one should test their own actions,
then they can take pride in themselves alone without comparing themselves to someone else,
for each one should carry their own load.
Jordan Peterson said, do only those things that you could speak of with honor. That doesn't even sound like him, but I mean, not to say he wouldn't say something like
that, but that's just a cool quote.
I like it.
I like that a lot.
It's a great quote.
Brianna is with us in Dallas.
Hey, Brianna, welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hi.
Thank you so much for taking my call.
Sure.
What's up? So, I just need some advice because about, well, me and my husband had a daughter about
10 months ago now.
Yay!
And he lost his job around the same time.
Wow.
And so it's just been me, single income, and it's not at all what we expected going into he's not got a job in seven months
Right why I
Don't really know I mean he has a bachelor's degree no matter now, why isn't he throwing boxes at Walmart?
Why isn't he throwing boxes at Walmart? So right now he is doing like tasker jobs.
So like doing housework for people.
But that's kind of the only job that he's getting.
What's he making?
Or like, what does he make?
Yeah.
Oh, doing that.
He makes probably like on a good day about
$500 a day
Okay, but it's not every day it's like it's like $50 an hour for 10 hours work
Yes, I think he charges $35 an hour is he working 40 hours making $35 an hour. Is he working 40 hours making $35 an hour?
So maybe not five dollars
Maybe closer to like five. I'm sorry. It's five hundred dollars a week is basically what he brings. So he's not working 40 hours
No, it's it's basically like people sign up for what I understand what it is but he's not working 40 hours why no no sir I'm supporting him like trying to do more I guess I don't need to support him he needs to get off his butt and go why
do you need support so what was he doing they got got fired from? So he was a child
The children's director at a church that just didn't work out like he he's not really good at the admin side of things
Okay, so
What is he going to do with his life? And when is he gonna get his income up?
That's your all's problem is your husband is not working why and how we going to fix that? That's what we come down to in this
conversation. Does that make any sense at all? So your main breadwinner at this point is
not earning much money and doesn't have a plan to it doesn't sound like that's
scaring me. Yeah well I've always been the bigger income earner. I'm a nurse so
I have always been the breadwinner in a sense.
So we've been able to make it, but we just can't pay off our debts.
Because he's not working.
He's not working. Why are you defending him so much? Why are you defending him? You're talking
to two husbands with kids and spouses.
Who believe in hard work all the time.
Why are you defending him? I'm
just curious. I mean he's not on here to defend himself. So on behalf of
husbands and fathers everywhere, he needs to go get two jobs if not three and
begin to scratch and claw his way back because he's lost faith in himself. He's lost trust in himself
He is sitting around looking at the app waiting on somebody to task him to put in a dishwasher
My 15 year old son made more money than that this summer cleaning horse stalls with a shovel
Like it's it's about getting out there and taking care of his baby girl and
Honoring his family. I mean, it's that simple.
And Dave and I are both guys who follow dreams too,
but we also had to work day jobs when we were first starting.
That's just the nature of it.
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to send you
a copy of Ken Coleman's book, The Proximity Principle.
I'm also going to send you a copy of Finding the Work
You're Wired to Do for him.
I want him to take that assessment that's in there
and develop a game plan to go be somebody. I also want to send you to build an
unanxious life. Y'all, I'll say it this way, you're enabling this stuff. If you keep
apologizing for him and keep trying to support him and pat him on the back seven
months later, that shame thing is getting deeper and deeper and deeper. I want you all to
read that book together too.
There's three of them we'll send you.
Yeah, we're gonna load you up and try to help you get going.
But the answer to your math equation is more income and it's sitting in front of you
looking at an app waiting on someone to task him to do a dishwasher. And he's not even doing a lot of that. So
there's lots of things to do in your wonderful city of Dallas that people will pay you for.
And they're not necessarily what you want to do right then, but you do what you've got
to do till you don't got to do it no more.
And you just push and push.
And yeah, I would imagine that he's anxious.
And I'll help you with this.
His anxiety will go down as his workload goes up.
Yes, and his shame and his, that low-level dysthymia, that depressive feeling, I don't
know, I don't know, that will go away as he begins to walk taller, that he is proving
to himself that he can work hard.
And by the way, people like to do the counselor-y part, but they don't like to take notes.
They like to do the ministry play and let's think about things, but they don't like to take notes. They like to do the ministry play
and let's think about things,
but they don't like doing the administrative stuff.
That's just part of, that's just a job.
It's a job, right?
Like, and so he has to do things he doesn't like,
and that's the core here, man.
He's gotta go work,
and all work has hard parts of the job that's not fun.
Even this job that we have, and it's a blast, but there's also parts of it that are hard that I don't like to do, that I don't wanna do, but it's part of the job that's not fun, even this job that we have. And it's a blast, but there's also parts of it that are hard
that I don't like to do, that I don't want to do,
but it's part of the job.
Every job has that.
And he's gonna have to get over himself
and then get after it and go get a job,
get multiple jobs and get his confidence back.
And then he can start looking towards
what do we actually want to build together?
But man, oh man, oh man.
Yeah.
Dave, that's like the second or third call
we've taken today. Yeah, there's a manhood crisis. There's a bad man. Yeah. Dave, that's like the second or third call we've taken today.
Yeah, there's a manhood crisis.
There's a bad manhood crisis.
And it's just, I don't know what it is,
and it's happening, but it's-
I mean, it's multi-layered and multi-tiered, but-
There's a lot underlying all of these things,
and there's different situations, obviously,
that we're talking to, but this still comes down to,
my grandmother used to say there's a great place to go when you're broke to work.
And the first thing you do is you get up and you leave the cave, you kill something and
you drag it home.
We will discuss living dreams and self-actualizing and maximizing your potential and putting
right tools in your belt and education and all those things later.
Right now, let's go about the business of eating.
And let me say this, let me own this. On behalf of the mental health practitioners in the United States,
we sold everybody this bill of goods, which is the key to being well and whole
and right with yourself in a relationship was to get all the right thoughts in the right order.
And if you just sit around and think about the next thing and think about it and think
about it and think about it, that suddenly everything becomes clear and that's just not
how it works.
You have to take action on things.
And so if you sit around waiting for this job to materialize in your mind, waiting for
this plan to, that's just not how it works.
You get out there and start working and you start figuring out what part about this job
I'm good at, I'm not good at, I like, don't like, I'm gonna take another job
and another job and it begins to distill down for you what you are fully
created to go do and then you get really good at that thing and then you become
passionate about it. But this idea that I don't know man it's just ruining
families across the country. It's diligent. The diligent prosper.
Gosh, just keep showing up.
Not the contemplative.
There you go.
And even the contemplative, even the monks
had daily ritual practices that got them worked.
Oh.
It's a thing they did.
Yeah.
Right?
Absolutely.
You can't just sit here and think your way to these
solutions, you gotta get out there and get after it.
If you feel stuck, go get a job, go to a gym, go for a walk, go do things, and then your thoughts begin to work themselves
out.
Well, and, you know, I'm singing to the choir here, but the data also says that the chemicals
are released, the endorphins are released that fight back depression, that fight back
the blues when you are engaged physically into doing something,
when you're mentally engaged into doing something.
And so when you step into something,
all of the condemnation and the shame,
bad tapes playing in your head,
they start to run out
because you're too tired to think about it.
And you're focused on a thing.
Yeah.
And like a guy I used to work for said,
he said, you won't die of hard work
Right before you die you'll pass out
That puts us our the Ramsey show in the books We'll be back with you before you know it in the meantime remember
There's ultimately only one way to financial peace and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace Christ Jesus.