The Ramsey Show - Push Through Your Financial Setbacks—Don’t Surrender to Them
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From the Ramsey Network, it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do work
that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I'm George Campbell, joined by the best co-host
a guy could ask for, Rachel Cruz. Also my co-host on our other show, Smart Money Happy
Hour is joining me and we're taking your calls at 888-825-5225. You call us, we'll attempt
to give you the right next step for your life and your money. Zach has chosen to do that
out in Salt Lake City. What's going on Zach? Welcome to the Ramsey show.
Yeah, so
I find myself kind of in a little bit of a pickle here. Um, so
long story short
I've been in step two for the past few years now with me and my wife.
Um, we're about 400,000 in debt, um, between our mortgage and a few other
things, um, the issue, um, where I've tried for the past couple of years to
I've tried for the past couple years to work with my wife and create a budget that we can stay in, but inevitably every month we're over budget, leading to us not really being
able to pay anything down.
We stay kind of stagnant as far as the amount of debt that we're in. I mean, we've
been to marriage counseling and talked to various people about this, including, you
know, the family and, you know, the counselors themselves.
What was the reason for the marriage counseling? It wasn't about the budget. There was other
things going on, it sounds like.
There were some other things at times. We've been married for 10 years. We have four kids
and we've had some ups and downs, but in general we're pretty good. But money was one of the
big things for me. It stresses me out incessantly. Like I'm constantly stressed about money all
the time. It's one of the biggest things that we have arguments about, unfortunately.
Okay. So what's causing you guys to go over each month? What are the reasons?
Just spending.
But is your budget unreasonable? Like, are you saying, hey, we're going to spend 200
bucks on groceries, but every month it's 600, where you need to just adjust it to reality?
Or do you think, hey, we are just not really even looking at the budget
We're not tracking transactions
I try to track the transactions. I even use the every dollar apps
I switched over to it from the mint app actually when that closed down awesome, but
the
The grocery
Miscellaneous, you know, clothing
budget, that kind of stuff.
I have two grand set aside for that.
And we go over every month, like sometimes by thousands of dollars.
And a lot of the purchases, like my wife justifies as necessary because
Oh, the kids need this.
So we need this.
Uh, I'm not spending it on myself.
I'm spending it on the kids.
I'm spending it on the house.
I'm spending it on all these things. And I look at it and I'm like, did we really need this. I'm not spending it on myself. I'm spending on the kids. I'm spending it on the house I'm spending it on all these things and I look at it and I'm like did we really need this and that what?
And it is what inevitably ends up in an argument is well
We don't need these things in my mind, but in her mind we do and she's not spending it on herself. So
Yeah, it's just it it goes in circles. And I just.
Do you guys, Zach?
Yeah, so what I think the problem is overall
is that it sounds like you guys are not on the same page.
Maybe you're like, I have every dollar,
I'm tracking transactions, I'm stressed about money.
I, it's a lot of one sidedness is what it sounds like.
And my question to you is,
have you both sat down multiple times and said,
hey, let's create a budget together,
or even bigger than that, Zach,
like, hey, here's where we wanna go financially.
Like, here's where we want our family to be
in the next five, 10, 15 years, and we dream together,
we have goals together, we are doing that.
Are you guys?
I'm assuming the answer is no.
We have sat down and done that before. We have multiple times. The problem arises that
I will mention that this does play a part in it. She does have anxiety and depression on her own that she's getting treatment for,
but a lot of times she emotionally spends or when she's feeling down, she'll go and
spend money and then she justifies it after the fact. But we sat down and said, hey, because
we want to move, for example, we want to get into, like we live in a town home now, we
want an actual home, eventually
that house that we can, our kids can play in the yard and have fun and grow and whatever.
And that's a goal that we both have.
And we've talked about it, like this is where we want to be in five or 10 years, but the
little actions don't lead to anything.
Or they don't lead in that direction.
And I talked to her about it multiple,
like two or three times a month, I sit down,
okay, this isn't good, we're not heading
in the right direction, this is where you wanna be,
this is where we wanna be, you know, in five or 10 years.
Then it's like that just goes in one ear out the other,
she agrees in the moment, but then the actions don't.
Don't line up.
Line up.
No, I hear you.
And then she'll beat herself over it later down.
Sure, sure.
Oh, I'm so sorry. Whatever.
The mentality starts to come out and it gets really hard to have a conversation about it.
Right. Totally. Yeah. So I think the way I would start approaching it, Zach, is less,
Yeah, so I think the way I would start approaching it, Zach, is less, here's what you're doing, you're overspending, you're not online with our goals, you're doing, you know, it's a
lot of you, you, you to her versus approaching the conversation with, I mean, have you gone
to her and just the agony of how much this is stressing you out?
Have you been honest with her completely about the weight that you feel like you're carrying
and not about her actions, but about what you're feeling?
Yes, to the point that I've actually had to seek out
counseling for my own anxiety
because it's stressed myself out.
She's encouraged me to go,
but that doesn't solve the root problem.
The fact that we have our budget every month.
And it's a struggle,
because I thought maybe we just need to,
like I've tried the envelope method with cash
and that doesn't seem to work.
I don't know, I've been tempted to just like
completely separate our finances entirely
and just say, hey, here's a card.
Once it's used up, we can't like a checking,
separate checking account for sending.
Yeah, that's just, I think that's a,
yeah, I hear what you're saying
and I get how you will get there.
But also I think that that's a bandaid
on these bigger issues that's happening within her
is what it's sounding like.
And usually I feel like we can kind of play
both sides of the aisle on these calls.
But from what you're telling us, Zach,
is it does sound like there is something within her, right?
That she's finding her security,
she's finding a level of medicating through spending
is kind of what it sounds like.
But you said, and she is struggling
with some depression and anxiety.
And is she an ongoing help for that?
Yes, she's been an ongoing help for that.
She's been getting counseling for about
seven, eight years for that, the majority of our marriage.
I think at this point, Zach, we just need to set up guardrails and the conversation
instead of attacking her might be, hey, can I help you set up some guardrails so that
we can stay on track this month and accomplish our goals?
And that might mean, hey, we remove the debit card info, we get rid of Amazon Prime, start
to figure out where the overspending is happening and add friction back in with ongoing counseling
and ongoing conversations.
Yeah, I think there's bigger things happening, Zach, in your marriage between you guys.
And it's coming out as money for sure, but I think the root cause is something much deeper.
And so you guys concentrating and working on that.
And in the meantime, setting up some of these tactical friction points for her would be helpful.
But yeah, there's some deeper things there for sure, Zach,
that I would get to the root of if I were you guys.
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There's no safe like Simply Safe. Kari's up next in Fort Worth, Texas. What's going on, Kari?
Hey guys, thank you so much for taking my call today.
Sure. How can we help?
Oh boy. So I have a kind of complex situation, but I'll start with basics. My husband and
I only have one remaining debt, but we're kind of lost
as to what the next steps are because I have a lot of medical issues that prevent me from
working. I've had a really hard time finding something I can do from home. And we want
to be able to save for our future and start saving, you know, investing in our retirement.
And we're just kind of stuck because of the situation that we found ourselves in.
So I was really hoping that you guys could kind of give us some guidance about what
the next, the right next step would be.
Yeah. What's going on health wise for you?
So I was just diagnosed with neuropathy in my legs and my feet about a month ago. I've been dealing
with that now for about five months. So sorry. Yeah. And so I had this happen about 15 years
ago. I'm 26. Okay. And my husband's 31. And about 15 years ago, the same thing happens with my eyes so my optic nerves deteriorated.
Wow.
So, I'm legally blind in one and my overall vision is just like very degraded.
I tell people it's like watching a black and white movie in color.
So I can't drive and it's very difficult for me to stand or walk for long periods of time.
Okay.
So I've been looking ever since we got married. We just had our second
anniversary last Monday and I've been looking ever since we got married for
something that I could do from home, you know, a side hustle, something part-time,
even something full-time. And I counted last night, I was up half the night just going over all,
everything was bothering me.
And that's why I called today actually.
Uh, and it was, I think I counted between somewhere between 400 and 450
applications between networking online, like things like Indeed and ZipRecruiter,
and in-person things I've tried over the last couple of years, and I've had one interview.
And they really, really liked me, but I didn't get hired.
What kind of role was that?
So I was a medical receptionist for three years before I had to quit working full time.
Okay.
It sounds like the type of work you'd be able to do from home would require mostly phone
if it's difficult to look.
I assume it's difficult to look at screens all day.
No, actually I Twitch stream right now because I don't know what else to do with my life.
Oh, wow.
So screens are no issue.
No, screens are not an issue as long as they have like blue screen protectors and stuff like that.
Yeah.
They don't have to have that.
Okay. Have you applied for like personal assistant type roles, administrative roles, all of that?
Administrative assistant, personal, you know, personal assistant of data entry, you name it. I actually even went through a seminar
for you guys' financial coach master training.
I had to turn that down too, because we couldn't afford it.
What's left on your debt?
So it's just my husband's student loans from college.
He has just over 30K left in that.
And what does he make?
66 gross, and after, let me see, because certain things
come out of his pay before we even get his paycheck. So our HSA and his 401k and our
medical dental vision insurance all come out before his paycheck. So at that point like
spending money. Can I free you? You'll get some money back if he just pauses investing right now.
That's true. Including the HSA contributions. Do you guys need that to cover medical care?
Yes, that's what's paying our medical bills right now is what's going into the HSA because
the company matches that. Okay. So how much is he investing in the 401k?
matches that. Okay. So how much is he investing in the 401k? Oh, I actually don't know. Okay. Actually working from home today. Let me see if he knows. I'm just saying that number will now be
back in your budget every month to help you pay off this debt faster. And is he able to work any
overtime or any side hustles? Right now? She's bothered. I love that he's like, let's get him
on the line. This is great. We love
this moment.
Yeah. Well, he works from home two days a week. So he just happens to be home today.
He thinks it's 3%. Okay. And then his company matches that 3%. Is that right, hon? Okay.
Yeah. He's nodding yes.
So Carrie, I think for me, the biggest question I have is all these applications that you
have put out into the world, 400 or so.
I really am a little perplexed as to, are they, do you think, more advanced positions
than what they see you as qualified for?
Have you gone more entry level?
Because we've talked to many people that there's... Okay, tell us. they see you as qualified for? Like have you gone more entry level? Because I mean, because
we've talked to many people that there's okay, tell us.
So I only have 25 college hours. I don't have a degree. I went straight into the workforce
because I didn't know I did one year of college and then we moved. My family moved. We used
to live a little further south of the DFW in Metroplex.
And so when we moved up here, I paused my college to help my mom get our house set up.
But are these jobs requiring a degree in the application?
A lot of them are, yes.
A lot of them are.
So those you couldn't even apply for because you don't qualify.
Exactly.
So I've only been looking at ones that only require a high school diploma.
What about customer service roles?
I've definitely looked into that as well. The only problem is, is that right now a lot
of customer service positions are requiring you to not love. So many companies are trying
to pull people back into the office instead of staying at home.
I have not heard that as far as customer service goes.
Here in Texas, it's really, really bad.
The other problem is that I'm not bilingual.
And a lot of positions here in the DFW area especially
require you to be bilingual.
Well, I would be looking outside of town.
If it's remote, then companies all over the country
would be able to hire you.
Right, right.
So the only problem is that a lot of companies require
you to live in certain states
because they only serve those states.
So I've only been able to look at the ones that-
I've not heard this either.
I know, I know.
Dude, it's been a ride.
So I've only been able to look at the ones that say,
you can live in Texas for this role,
which has been about half of the ones
I've looked at on
average. Okay, you're gonna have to continue the search, get creative. I would be posting
on your personal social pages and LinkedIn and reaching out to friends, texting people,
and asking how their specific roles. That's what I've been doing for two years, and I know a lot of
people in the area, you know, I know a lot of people and with a lot of good connections
and they just haven't been able to find me anything. Because a lot of stuff, what I've
been told by a couple of different employers that did look at me was basically I'm too
qualified for a lot of the entry level things and I'm not qualified enough for anything
higher up. I'm in that really weird in-between section where no one wants to take a look at me
because I'm in between.
What would it take for you to finish your college hours
online for a community college?
So we can't afford what that would cost us right now.
I'm saying community college.
So we have a local community college
that I was going to when I started working.
It would, for me to take even
part-time classes, it would take, I want to say at least 500 a month to do that
and I've applied for like scholarships and stuff and they keep telling us I
don't qualify for financial aid because we make too much money and I don't qualify for financial aid because we make too much money. And I don't qualify for anything but academic scholarships.
And generally, those range from anywhere to 500 to 1,000.
They might cover like one or two semesters, maybe.
So what we've heard, Carrie, which I understand from a medical standpoint, like you've gone
through a lot.
Like it's very, I can only imagine what you're living, you know, it's so difficult, but it
does feel like every question we asked, there was always a reason of why it's not working.
So we need to be shifting our perspective.
And I mean, you could go online and be a secret shopper and get paid 20 bucks an hour.
Do that.
Like have a goal just to make $300 a month. Like right, I mean like go like very basic. You need a little
confidence booster, Carrie, and a little pep in your step that I can do this. I
can do this. Yeah, a little persistence, a little creativity. Yes, and I understand that it is so
hard and so difficult for sure, but man, I just know George, we have people on
this show and they're 19 years old and they're making $200,000
because they're coders.
They got creative.
It's stuff that you're like, wait, what?
So there's things out there, Carrie,
and I just want you to have a little bit more
of some rose-colored glasses
and a little bit more confidence as you go into this stuff
because there are rolls out there
and I bet you can find them.
Hey you guys if you're looking to save big on groceries without sacrificing
quality you've got to check out Aldi. That's right Rachel because let's be
real I'm bougie but I'm also frugal.
You're bougie, George.
Thank you for admitting it.
So why pay more for the same stuff
just because it has a fancy label?
Aldi shoppers save up to 36% on a typical shopping trip
over name brand products at other stores,
which adds up to about $4,000 per year for a family of four.
It's crazy, yeah.
And you know what?
Their organic produce, their fresh meats, and even their private label, it's all delicious.
So it's good quality stuff that's not going to bust the budget.
And the best part?
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lowest prices of any national grocery store.
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Okay, so stop paying more and start shopping at Aldi.
Find a store near you today at aldi.us.
That's A-L-D-I dot U-S.
Mercedes is up next in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Mercedes, welcome to the show.
How can we help?
Hello.
So, back in 2023, summer 2023, my husband and I purchased a home.
And I feel like that was like the first moment of like kind of going like more off the Ramsey plan. And so now it's just like,
the taxes went up a little bit and so it's like 42% of our take home pay.
Oh my God.
I know luckily we don't have any other debt,
so there's that.
But yeah, I really wanna sell it.
I just feel so stressed
and financially insecure all the time.
And I feel like that's what you guys are gonna say.
So I guess I'm just looking for confirmation
that I'm not crazy.
Well, let's look at all the solutions first.
Selling a house is one of the biggest financial moves
you'll make aside from buying one. And so I'd never jump to that conclusion. And at 42% take-home pay,
yes, it's bad, but nothing's on fire here. Now, you guys don't have any debt. So the question is,
are you, do you have a fully funded emergency fund? No, we don't have that either. Okay. We're kind
of working on that now. How much do you have in savings? Right now, about
like 8,000 or so. Okay. And how much margin do you have right now, aside from all of your
bills and insurance, how much money do you have left over? Like to save? Yeah. Depending
on the month, like in overtime and everything, maybe like a couple hundred to a thousand. Okay.
But that's with overtime.
Well, yeah, without overtime, it's closer to a couple hundred.
And then like if we happen to work overtime, it might be like a thousand.
Are you guys doing any investing right now?
I think we just both have like our, just our basic 401k match at this point.
Okay.
So you're doing a lot at once and that's okay,
but it's not the Ramsey plan, like you said,
you kind of went off the reservation a little bit.
And what does your husband think?
I'm guessing he's saying, no, we're not going to sell it.
That's a crazy idea.
Yeah. He thinks that everything's fine, I guess.
Okay.
He doesn't feel stressed.
No.
So what exactly is stressing you out right now?
I don't think it's a percentage number.
It's not a percentage number.
It's how tight everything feels.
It's how much we have to like think really hard over like a decision.
I just feel like we came from a more expensive area, but I feel like here we definitely could
have purchased a more affordable house or, you know, could have done some things differently.
How much is your payment per month, your mortgage payment?
Like $2,500 around there.
Okay.
So, yeah, so automatically if you did the 20%, for instance, you would have close to
$1,000, a little bit more, just back in your pocket,
1200 bucks.
Yeah.
And you feel like with that, does that give you complete security?
If you had an extra $1200 a month, would you say Mercedes, like, okay, now we don't have
to pinch every penny?
Is that enough for you or do you think, golly, I think we'd probably need a little bit more
even beyond that?
I think we could be okay with that.
And like having our emergency fund fully funded,
but we'd also get there a lot faster if we had to save,
I mean, not quite half as much because we have other
expenses that might be a little bit more fixed than like
mortgage, but like, I mean, maybe 30% less at least.
Yeah.
Okay. Here would be my solution.
I would give this thing six to 12 months to see if we can up our income to where that lowers the amount of take home pay is being
eaten up by this mortgage. And by income, I would say your primary income, not to work
extra. We need sustainability here. Yeah. Yeah. You don't want to be working overtime
to try to get this percentage down, but just from your, just your jobs. That's what we're
doing. So do you see, do you see anything changing in the next 12 months for you guys job
wise that will create some increase in working yeah my husband's been working
super hard at his job and like I feel like he's he's been there for a couple
years since being right before we got the house and I feel like he's starting
getting noticed he had like a promising interview but it was just an interview
you know but I mean I think just he's heading in the right direction like he's starting to get noticed. He had like a promising interview, but it was just an interview, you know, but I mean, I think just he's heading in the right direction. Like,
he's starting to be like told to apply for roles. And so I think maybe there's promise there. He's
definitely always like spoken of in high regard at his job. And then for me, I definitely can keep
looking for stuff. I did just like get I'm getting my resume redone
Oh, wait, are you working?
Mercedes yeah, I work you do work. Okay. Okay. Okay. Sorry. Just making sure what do you make it? Okay?
Um, I make about like 50,000 before overtime like gross. Okay, and he's making
75 85 closer
He's probably like around like 60. Okay, I don't know hourly
I'm at like 23 and he's at like 29. Okay, so an hour that helps. Yeah, so you guys are making six figures as a couple
But you're yet 2500. Yes, it's high but I don't think this is as on fire as you think it is
Yeah, and so I'm not here to side with your husband.
I do think that he should be more concerned.
So I think we should meet in the middle and go,
hey, we need to develop a plan to get this income up,
get this emergency fund funded.
And that means pausing investing for a season.
Yes, you'll miss the match,
but you're gonna have some peace back in your life
when you have 15 or 20K sitting in that savings account
and we're getting our income up at the same time
so that this 2,500 is just a smaller part of our world.
Because if you can have your take home pay be $10,000,
and when we talk about the mortgage parameter,
we're saying after taxes, but before other deductions,
like your healthcare premiums, your 401k,
that will affect your math in a good way.
So you may want to recalculate
to give yourself some peace right now.
Okay.
Yeah. Yeah.
And I don't want to rag on my husband.
He has always been, we need to get better jobs.
We need to make more money, you know.
Yeah. And I think, and I think I see that as the solution
of a realistic one too.
I think you guys can, can get better paying jobs.
I mean, honestly, I think whether it's through raises
and moving up within the companies, but I do see a track for you guys that you probably will be making more,
which will lower that percentage. I said to 20, I meant to 25 earlier, but yeah, I'm with George.
It's not on fire right now, but you also don't want to live like this for the next five years
of your life either. So something needs to be given in the next six to 12 months. And I think that'll
give you some hope and some peace for sure. And it's hard too when you're making good
money. I mean, that's great. I mean, you guys are at like 110,000 a year. And it's frustrating
when you feel like I still have to pinch pennies and still think through things
that should just be automatic and they're not.
So there's a reality to life in numbers
that I feel like is always kind of a hard pill to swallow,
but that's the reality of it.
So I don't think that's not gonna go away forever.
I feel like regardless of your income,
you need to be thinking through purchases
and you may not have the stress on it,
but that doesn't completely go away.
And we talk a lot about how we want home ownership
to be a blessing and not a burden.
And this is what we're talking about.
If you don't have an emergency fund
and you jump into home ownership and you're going,
well, it's better than renting.
I don't want to throw money away on rent.
This is where you can end up with too much
of your take-home pay being eaten up by this mortgage on top of repairs and maintenance and increasing property
taxes and insurance and that can leave people in a real bind.
So what that means is we might have to pause.
We might need to buy a home in a different neighborhood.
We might need to get a townhome for now instead of the single family home, save up a bigger
down payment.
And so I don't like for anyone to rush into home ownership thinking it's going to solve their problems.
It will only create more problems and I say that as someone who loves home ownership.
I think everyone should be a homeowner at some point in their life and the earlier the
better but there's a right time to do it and that's when you're out of all consumer debt
which our friend Mercedes was, good on her, fully funded emergency fund, that's three
to six months of expenses, and a healthy down payment
where you can cover closing costs out of pocket on top of that. And so that's a difficult place to be.
I'm not trying to make it sound easy, but it requires a higher income than it did five years
ago to be a homeowner. Right, right. Well, and she said it earlier, and I think this is, this can be
the attitude sometimes when you go into homeownership, especially your first home. She's like,
looking back hindsight, we probably could have,
probably bought something a little bit smaller or so.
You know what I mean?
Like she made the comment of like,
oh, we probably could have.
And what's difficult is when you go to the bank
to pull your loan.
They will lend you monopoly money for these purchases.
They will give you so much and you think,
what?
Oh my gosh.
Thank you for believing in me, bank.
Unbelievable, bank.
I'm so great.
I'm so good at this. And then you take all that money that they're going to loan you
and go get a house off that.
And no, you need your own parameters.
And the Ramsey way is more conservative with homeownership.
Our numbers are.
But it's so that you have more margin to do other things,
like giving and investing and all of this and living life.
So you're not having to think twice about all these small purchases.
I feel like it should be a given.
So remember, just because the bank is going to offer you a
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All right. Shelby is in Dallas, Texas up next. What's going on, Shelby?
Hi, I was just wondering, I've been dating my boyfriend for about a year now and we're starting to talk about marriage.
He's Australian. And basically, we were talking about finances
and he would want to keep them like completely separate. He
earns like a little over double what I earn.
He just bought his first house as well.
And it concerns me.
He also mentioned maybe wanting me to sign a prenup.
And I just feel not secure maybe marrying and having kids with somebody who feels, you
know, finances should be 100% separate.
So I was kind of
wondering what y'all thoughts were, if you had any advice for me on this topic, basically,
moving forward.
Yeah. Did he give you reasons why he wants to keep it separate? Is it because of the
amount he earns? Is it something that happens in his past, his parents? Like, did he give
you reasons why? Yeah, pretty vague.
His parents did get divorced, but on fairly good terms,
I think the income disparity is a bit of an issue for him,
which I don't not understand.
But I think mainly he just wants to feel
that he's in control of the money that he's earned.
We were talking about it last night night actually, and he was saying,
well, I don't believe that it would be our money, you know, if we were married.
What I earn is like my money.
So it would be his house, his money, and you just get the privilege of living there
at a discounted rate? Is that what this future looks like?
Basically, I don't think he sees it that way, but yeah, that's kind of what he's said.
That's what he's saying.
It sounds like he wants to be single.
No, he wants to be single.
No, George, he loves her.
He wants the benefits of the relationship.
He loves her.
But he doesn't want the commitment of a relationship.
Commitments from a financial standpoint, which means, is an indicator of what you're getting
at, George, an indicator of I I wanna keep parts of myself to me
and you keep you over there and I want it nice and tidy
and I want to enter into a lifelong relationship with you,
which is not realistic, like this tidiness
and this like, I'm here, you're there,
and this feels good, like, no,
you guys are about to share a bed,
you're gonna have kids and share genetics
that are running around in front of you.
You're sharing every other part of your life.
And yet you have to Venmo him for Outback Steakhouse?
That's the future here.
I mean, that's what it sounds like, yeah.
Cause I was saying, well, maybe we could have
a joint account and agree upon a percentage of our checks
that we put into separate discretionary spending.
Yep, so the red flag to me, the big overarching is that if you want to keep yourself from
me, and you are financially when he's living like this, there's going to be other parts
of our marriage that are going to be in that exact same formula.
Because that's your mindset.
You can't go into a marriage and say, I want this part for me, this part for you.
Kids, yeah, sure, we'll share together.
Calendars, no, I'll go do my thing.
You can't live your life like that in a marriage.
Well, you can't live your life like that in a,
I would say a healthy, well-connected marriage.
Because the healthiest marriages that we see
are ones that people say, I do to you
for the rest of my life.
And I see it as a covenant.
I see it as something bigger than me
and we're entering into this
and every part of our lives we're combining.
And that doesn't mean that you're not still Shelby
and he's not still him.
And he has his quirks with money
and he loves the budget and you don't.
There's still gonna be opposites.
You're still gonna have your natural tendencies.
But to say that I'm going to block you from a part of me to keep me in control over here, that's saying a lot
about someone.
It really is.
And a lot of people disagree with this advice.
If you called another money show, they probably wouldn't be as bothered as we are.
But we see this as a reflection of the person more so than just the reflection of the bank
account.
I've rarely seen a thriving marriage with total unity
and love long-term that lives this way.
It's just too hard because it turns into resentment
and scorekeeping of, well, I covered this bill last time,
and well, I make half as much,
so I should only cover half as much of the bills.
It just becomes tit for tat,
and that's just not a way to live your life
entering into this.
It's a business relationship,
not a romantic unity, not a partnership. And it life entering into this. It's a business relationship, not a romantic,
you know what I mean?
Not a partnership.
And it causes financial infidelity down the line
because you have no say or transparency
into what he's doing with money.
You could have a spending addiction
that you're totally unaware of
because you don't see the account,
you don't have access to the account.
And so I'm not saying this relationship shouldn't continue,
but I do think we need to, we need to find some
consensus and unity here in alignment in what our future
looks like. And I don't think he's a bad guy. I think this is
just all he knows. And I think truthfully, at the heart of this
is fear. And so getting to the root of that fear, and
overcoming it over time with lots of conversations, maybe
some counseling, and realizing that one day you might not have
an income at all. What if you stay home with the kids? What happens then? Do you get an allowance? He said in that case, he'd be
willing to reconsider and combine things for that amount of time. But I just, the whole thing makes
me feel like gross. Yes. Yes. No, I, I would charge him rent for the nine months that that baby
Yes, yes, no, I. I would charge him rent for the nine months
that that baby is housed inside of you.
So you go, well, a thousand bucks a month,
nine months, that's nine grand you owe me.
Is he bringing in a lot of money?
Like, does he have like millions of dollars
in an account that he's bringing in?
No, the issue is just really that
I'm not earning enough right now.
I'm making about 30, which is is not good and he's making about 85
Alright
Making like four I thought he was a surgeon. I thought he was making half a million to 600 and you're like I'm making 150
I don't know. He's making
$85,000 I'm sorry get off your high horse. I don't know. He's making eighty five thousand dollars. I'm sorry get off your high horse. I can't
Oh, I can't is this I can't
Listen it takes a lot to take off Rachel and he done ticked her off
Well, I'm like, I'm sorry. Your little ego is so inflated at 85 like 85 is great. Listen, it's great
Hey, babe, let me handle it. I'm the breadwinner here
You know what what happens making six figures dude, what happens if you're not even making six figures, dude, but what happens if
you make more than him? Then do you get control of the board? That's, that's been a lot of my issue
because I've told them, you know, if you, if this is how he entered a marriage at some point,
because of some other circumstances, I could see maybe in the future, I may earn more. His job is
very physical. If he loses it, that's kind of, it's a big,
it's gonna be an issue.
And if I do earn more later on and you have an issue,
I'm gonna feel like, well, I hope you figure it out
because that's how you treated me.
And that's not the mindset I want to go with you.
Either way, the relationship is ruined.
And you're already going into score keeping.
Like even that scenario.
You're not even married yet.
You know what I mean?
It's like, it's, so yeah, Shelby, I, and again,
I don't want to paint him like he's a bad guy.
I think you're right, George.
I think it's just all he knows.
It's all he's aware of.
But, but I mean that, that, I mean, it gets,
that gets down to a deal breaker for me.
Cause I, I just can't, I can't even imagine.
I can't imagine Winston.
He, like, I couldn't imagine playing that through
in a scenario, you know?
Well, I made more this month,
so I get control of the board for this month.
Because I'll be honest too, pre-nubs and stuff.
I've even, from my own just personal opinion, I've gotten even more lenient with those.
I used to be so anti them, but we've seen so many situations, and that's why I ask,
is he bringing in a lot?
I've had friends, I've gotten screwed with stuff.
I get it.
I get that there's a lot of pain and there's parts of like, hey, I want to be wise about this.
I get it. I can have a conversation around that. But not at 85, with not something really big that you're bringing in.
To me, I don't know if it's ego. Fear, George, is maybe what it is. I don't know. It just doesn't set you up well, Shelby.
What I wouldn't do is just look right past it and go oh well
Maybe it'll solve itself once we're married
Yeah, and you're not cuz your guts telling you something Shelby you said that you're like it makes me feel like oh because it is
You know yeah, it's not like Jeff Bezos. You know he got married
You know, he got married. Sure, sign the prenup.
Sign the prenup.
I don't sign the prenup for Jeff, you know?
But I don't know.
Yeah, Shelby, I'm sorry.
I would keep, if you love him, keep pressing in on it.
I mean, you know, let this be a good kind of litmus test to the relationship and how
much your opinion matters.
And if he values your opinion enough to learn
from you even, right?
Is there that humility there?
So let this kind of be a litmus test
of you guys talking through it,
but that would be hard.
That's all.
And guys, take note, all she wants is a joint account.
Okay, it's not that hard.
We could all be married and happy by now
instead of just closing our fists and going,
it's mine, all the jewels are mine. It's no way to live.
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From the Ramsey Network, this is The Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do
work that they love, and create amazing
relationships.
I'm Ramsey Personality, George Campbell, joined by my co-host, Rachel Cruz, bestselling
author and host of the Rachel Cruz Show.
We're taking your calls at 888-825-5225.
And Taylor's up first in Chicago.
What's going on, Taylor?
Hi, how are you?
Great.
How are you?
Oh, I'm good.
So, my question is, should I sell my house or borrow against it for my child's medical
needs?
Is there option C?
For me, no.
Okay. Walk us through this.
What are the medical needs and what will it cost?
Well, my son has some mental health issues and it will cost for quality health care,
mental health care, I'm around $60,000.
How much?
$60,000.
$60,000 and over what course of time?
60 to 90 days.
Wow.
Wait, is it a treatment facility?
Yes.
Okay.
Yes, a treatment facility.
Okay. Is it addiction type or suicidal?
Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia. Okay.
Okay. Okay.
Oh, I'm so sorry you're dealing with this, Taylor.
How old is he?
He's 22.
22.
22. Does he live with you?
Yes.
Okay.
And is this an outpatient type facility that you're looking into?
No, it's inpatient.
Inpatient, okay.
And how was this place recommended to you through like one of his maybe therapists or
psychiatrists? No nothing has been
recommended to me. It's just all research I've done on my own. Okay and is he in
medical under the care of a medical professional right now? Up until a
couple months ago he was on state-funded medical insurance, but they cut him off a
couple months ago.
Okay.
Why was that?
Because of, they said, I made too much money.
How much do you make?
$19 an hour.
And that's too much money for state-funded care?
Yeah. Because you're not at the poverty line essentially? In Illinois.
In Illinois, yes.
What other debts do you have?
Well, I
owed back taxes for last year. I hired one of those tax attorneys to
taxes for last year, I hired a, one of those tax attorneys to, um, um, delete the debt. However, it was just put on hold.
So taxes for last year.
And then I didn't file this year because, um, I don't receive like, I pay everything.
I don't receive like any food stamps or anything like that besides receiving the medical.
But so the only way for me to maintain my bills and food
was to file all my exemptions.
So at the end of the year, I end up
owning taxes that I can't afford.
So the back taxes is everything you owe.
You don't have any other debt?
Car loans, credit cards, medical debt?
I don't have any.
I have a car loan, no credit cards, student loans, that's it.
My debt is minimal, but my income is even more extreme minimal.
Yeah.
What do you do for a living?
Right now, I just work in a factory.
Okay.
What is your son doing during the day?
Unmedicated, he is usually having what we call a bad day. He usually hears voices.
Is it just you two in the home? Is there anyone else involved here? Other family?
No, I have a daughter. She's 19.
Okay. And is she in the home as well?
Yes.
What does ongoing care look like outside of this inpatient treatment?
Outside of the inpatient, continued therapy, and I'm sure medication.
I had a father who was also schizophrenic. And so, and you know, and so, but I'm willing to sell my house or
whatever for his care because at some point you have to break the cycle. And most of,
you know, things that happen with people who suffer from mental illnesses is the lack of
quality care.
Yeah. Yeah.
And people being able to afford it.
And it's very noble as his mother to be willing to do that. My only fear is that you
sell this home, cover the care, and now you can't afford rent somewhere.
Right now I'm paying rent and mortgage, two power bills. I mean, I'm behind in those because...
Why are you paying both?
Because I rented out my house without protecting myself with a lease and then the guy moved
out and so for the remainder of my lease, I've been paying the rent and mortgage.
So you are renting a different place and then you subleased it to him but then he stopped
paying so now it's on you?
Well, my house that I own, I rented my house out to someone I know.
Okay, but I'm confused why you're paying rent to yourself if you're the landlord.
My misunderstanding?
No, you're living somewhere else. Yes, I'm living somewhere else paying rent to yourself if you're the landlord my misunderstanding you're living somewhere else I'm yes, I'm living somewhere else. Okay, when is that lease up the wherever you're renting?
In just two more months two more months. Okay, how much are you paying in rent right now?
A thousand dollars in rent and an eight hundred dollar mortgage
Okay, so the rent will be done because you'll move back into your house.
So that's a thousand dollars freed up, which is great.
It's just from your overall financial.
Okay, overall, yeah, financial perspective.
Are you behind on the home that you own?
No, no.
Okay, but you are behind on rent.
Yes, I'm usually behind two weeks late rent.
Okay.
So I'm caught up for the month that I don't owe any back months.
Okay, I gotcha.
And what's left on the car loan and the student loans?
Well, I have student loans and my daughter has student loans and that's about $12,000.
Are the student loans co-signed for her or is it a parent plus loan?
Parent plus loan and then I have some myself.
Okay, is she working or she?
And she she just graduated and she will pay those herself. Okay good
I'm just trying to find any way to alleviate you in order to create some margin right now
And what's your car payment every month?
150 and my insurance is $100. Okay, and what's the house worth?
Right now it's probably worth $130.
And what could you sell?
What do you owe on it?
$57.
OK.
So Taylor, as a mom, I can't feel you.
I can't empathize with your exact situation.
But we say all the time, your kids are everything, right?
And when there's a health issue involved,
parents, we'll do anything.
I mean, you're like, I'll sell my house for it.
So what I would say before you make any decisions,
because I know you're going to help your son,
is I would keep researching
because there is a plethora of medical care
and a spectrum price-wise that is very different.
So 60 maybe at the high end, could he get care for 20?
Right. And there's there's a path that's more financially stable in that way.
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NCU. Carl is with us up next in DC.
What's going on Carl?
How can we help?
How are you doing sir?
Great.
All right.
Sir, did you just call George sir?
I feel.
How old are you Carl?
That was kind.
I'm 17, sir.
Someone raised you right.
Look at that respect.
All right.
My question is, so I plan on going to the Navy or airports, ideally Navy, to become
a pilot.
That explains it.
There's the manners.
Well done.
I would like to, dream scenario, go to the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis. If that does not work out, I will do ROTC down in the South and currently run two businesses,
you could say, and I'm planning on making around $13,500 this summer.
You're breaking up on us, Carl.
Speak directly into the phone.
Oh, man. Please don't tell me we're losing Carl.
No, no, we're not.
We're not.
Carl, you there?
Hello?
There we go.
Okay.
All right.
So I'm trying to go to the Naval Academy.
If not, do ROTC.
Okay.
My question is, would it be smart to buy a used Tesla Model Y for around $23,000 using a parent, like my parents buy it. I
give them a $10,000 down payment. They pay the rest and I pay them over the course of
about a year using my Navy Skype and what I will make with my job. I just do not know
if it will be smart to put me in that position of owing money at
such a young age.
Easy answer, no.
It is not smart and I'm glad you were thinking through it.
What worries you about this?
Why do you think it's not smart?
Because college is where I will go.
It's really tight together so I can walk.
The only issue would be is I would would be driving a lot, going to work,
because I would ideally want to be a land, do landscaping,
which would require me to drive places.
I would also have to drive to my parents' house, et cetera.
And pay in solar and where I would go, I could charge it for free,
and pay in solar and where I would go, I could charge it for free,
which would make sense logically,
like in terms of electricity,
just that worry of what if an unexpected thing comes up
and I cannot pay for that because I owe my parents money.
Okay, you're thinking through it.
How much money do you have right now?
I have $4,000 cash. I would save up for about another two more months, pay $10,000 down, maybe more.
$10,000 is like the bare minimum.
And then they would pay for it, and then I would like the difference with their money
out of pocket, and then I would pay them back over time.
Why do they have money?
Are your parents pretty well off where they could maybe match whatever you put in?
Yes. So let's say you put in six thousand dollars.
Would they be willing to chip in another six thousand dollars
and you pay twelve grand for a cash car?
Yes, sir. That to me, if this is a master class in personal finance, this is the number one thing that
will make you successful.
Stop thinking about how much down, how much a month and just think how much.
And if you don't have that amount, you just say no.
And that's delayed gratification.
Most adults in America today don't have that.
But if you can learn it at 17, you're going to be a multimillionaire by the time you're
in your 30s.
Yeah.
Because most people just collect more payments and go, well, it's normal.
I'll put money down.
Yeah.
And I would say too, Carl, this is a great place to practice a level of not only living
within your means, but a level of contentment.
Like, could you go get a $25,000 Tesla?
I mean, through what you said, I mean, there was an avenue.
You could do it, or could you drive a, you know, a $5,000, $6,000,
$7,000 car and be good with your lifestyle, right?
When you jump lifestyles so quickly, Larry Brichette,
this is an old quote, used to say that we spend the first
five to seven years of our marriages trying to obtain
the same level of lifestyle our parents did,
but it took our parents 30 years to get there.
And so this idea that we're gonna, we all of a sudden want to live a life as if
we're a 30 year old, but we are a 17 year old, right? You kind of jump that and
doing it creates debt as well. So there's a contentment piece and a math debt
piece. And if you can solve both of those like what George is saying and learn to be content and good and also stay away from debt, like your life will look so different in 10
years versus if you went another path.
All right.
Yeah, most of my money right now is in stocks and precious metals just as like a buffer.
A lot of it in Tesla stock and Palir, which is done me pretty good.
And I just would want to not, well, I really don't want to get in the position
of thinking I have money that I don't, overspending and then dig myself into a
deep hole because 10 years down the line, I don't want to be worrying about where
my next bill is going to go and what debt I'm going to have to pay off.
I'd rather know where I'm gonna put it
and how that's gonna grow and prosper with me.
Yeah, you're doing some good things right now.
I personally don't have any single stocks
or precious metals.
I would encourage you to do the same.
I just invest in mutual funds, so giant baskets of stocks,
because as you know, Elon can burp or leave the White House
and your stock goes crashing down and you freak out and sell it at a loss.
And the same with precious metals. You're not really buying anything there.
Precious metals don't produce anything. You're just buying a different form of currency that's not really going to go up in value like the stock market will.
And it's usually peddled from fear mongers who say, hey, if it all comes comes crashing down at least you'll have some gold and So I would encourage you at this young age
You don't need to live like a boomer buying precious metals because you saw an ad on late-night TV
And you also don't need a $23,000 car when you make $13,000
Got that so we say that you're
Everything with wheels and motors in your life should add up to no more than half of your annual income
So what will you make in the next 12 months?
In the next 12 months? So if I keep doing what I'm doing, ideally like 40,000, 40 to
60, depending on how busy I get.
And this is if you join the Navy too?
No. So I have another about another year till I will go and that would just be working
working like nothing and then saving everything I have because I don't really see a value
in putting buying a bunch of like useful stuff or either just save it for when I need it.
So just constantly working and then
Yeah, you've got a lot of flux in your life right now.
There's a lot of changes happening and so I would not tie yourself to a payment
I wouldn't tie yourself to a $23,000 car at 17 years old
I would buy however much you can afford in cash and if that's $5,000, that's your budget
Not long ago. I bought a car for $6,000 and my next car from that was a very very very very old Tesla
And so and Rachel has a Tesla too
Well, we are we love Teslas and so don't get us wrong
This is not me trying to dog Tesla
But trying to do it for the gas savings is a pretty insane justification to drive what we all know
I just want to drive a cool car. I know and I hate for you to do landscaping in a Tesla, you know
Yeah, you're gonna destroy that thing if a a piece of grass lands in there, it explodes.
You should see three kids in the back of mine.
Woof!
Let alone landscaping toys.
Cheerios all caked in there nasty.
Goldfish crackers.
Yeah. I know.
So Carl, I would buy the best car you can get
and do a pre-inspection, pre-purchase inspection on it.
It'll probably cost you a hundred bucks,
no matter what you're buying,
to make sure that you know what you're getting into,
and there's not gonna be a ton of repairs,
and stick to reliable brands.
Yeah, and Carl, I feel like you knew all this too.
I mean, you, can I just say, as a 17-year-old kid,
like the conversation we've had with you
is more promising than some we've had on the show
even today with some adults.
That are double or triple your age.
I mean, seriously, it's incredible.
Like, you really are, you're a very forward thinker. You're a problem solver. You've started business. I mean, like it's
incredible. And the discipline you have even to long within the military route. I'm like
all of it. Like, I think like there is so much good coming from you, Carl. So it's very,
it's very impressive. It is very impressive. And I would continue to be curious, continue to learn when it comes to this money stuff, read.
Yeah, I can continue to get some of this knowledge because I mean, some of the decisions you've made,
I think, you know, are fine, like, right?
I mean, you're okay.
But if you start going down a road, which this Tesla purchase using debt would start to open,
that's a new lane in this financial space.
And it's one that we say to steer clear of and that's your gut, Carl.
So trust your gut. You have a smart, you're smart.
You have a good head on your shoulders. So trust yourself in this.
And remember wealthy people do really boring things.
They save up and pay cash for stuff.
They invest in not exciting things,
but old mutual funds and their 401ks and their Roth IRAs.
Like, it's not flashy and exciting, Carl, okay?
But that will build you wealth over time,
over a long period of time.
So, trust your gut. 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 none at all.
Grieving families are suddenly left behind, scrambling to pay bills and trying to make
ends meet.
I also discovered that there are a lot of rip-offs in the life insurance world like
that whole life crap posing as an investment opportunity.
What you need is level term life insurance,
usually 10 to 12 times your income, which is the smartest, most affordable way to
protect your family. The key is finding an independent broker who represents a
ton of companies and works for you, not for the insurance company. This is exactly
what my friend Jeff Zander and his team at Zander Insurance are all about. They
shop the term life companies to find you the best options and they've been around for over
95 years. So you know they'll be there when you need them. Zander is the real
deal and that's why they've handled all my personal insurance for over 25 years.
I trust them and you can too. Visit zander.com for instant online quotes or for a more personal touch.
Give them a call at 800-356-4282. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show.
I'm George Campbell here with Rachel Cruz taking your calls at 888-825-5225.
Let's get to the question of the day
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All right.
Today's question comes from Jamie in Hawaii.
My dad passed away earlier this year and since then the stock market has dropped.
My 82 year old mom is concerned because she sees that she is losing her money.
I know how you feel about long term investing, but does that hold true for someone in their
eighties?
She's in pretty good health, but I don't see her living any more than 10 years. Should she stay the
course or move to a less volatile investments? So the overall question here is, should your
investing change as you head into your final stages of life. So the 80s, 90s.
Last decade.
Personally, no.
I'm gonna be staying, stay invested in equities
until I pass from this earth.
Now, a lot of people move to more conservative investments
like bonds, so they might have a split like a 60, 40,
where 40% is in bonds, or 70, 30, where 30% is in bonds.
And she's saying the stock market dropped.
It's now back up to record highs.
I don't know when this question was sent in,
but depending on what week you look at,
I would not be concerned with temporary drops.
And I also don't know what her financial situation is.
Does she have money outside of this?
How often is she withdrawing?
How much is she withdrawing?
How big is this total nest egg?
Lot of questions here that I would contact
a SmartVestor Pro to dig into
to give her a plan for the next 10 years.
But the short answer is,
we know that if your investments,
the rule of 72 would say,
if you get a 10% return over a long haul,
then every seven years your investment would double.
So if she has a million bucks in that nest egg,
it's gonna be two million, seven years from now. Right. That's pretty wild. Yeah. So I would not pull the money out of
skin, you know, fear, right, because you could be losing out on that million dollars. Yes. Yeah.
And I think that's the that's the case is to understand that this is a long term play and
even 10 years. I mean, that's long term. I mean, that's a decade that you're looking out for her.
And so there's enough room within that
for there to be some ups and downs,
even to a three, four, five year period of time, usually.
So I would go, Jamie, and I would look
and understand the fear drives a lot of people
because of that emotion drives a lot of people
to make bad financial decisions, especially with the market.
They wanna end up pulling money out.
And if she's losing money and it's at the bottom
and she freaks out and you-
It's the worst time to pull out.
It is, it is.
So you need to be really leaning on facts.
And so looking to see, okay, what has the history been
of the stock market?
Where are we today?
Where have we been in the last 12 months, 24 months?
You know, I mean, you can kind of map it out year by year
but overall you're going to see that the economy over time continues to go up. It will. There'll be some dips every
now and then, but you can't let those dips, like you're saying, short term, create a long
term problem for you for pulling all of your money out.
It's always come back. Even after the worst crashes, you look at a year later, two years
later, maybe three years later, and the market is back to record highs. Right. So if you're
saying she's going to live for at least 10 more years maybe three years later, and the market is back to record highs. So if you're saying she's gonna live
for at least 10 more years, likely,
God willing, and the creek don't rise,
I would let it ride and tell her
to stop looking at the portfolio
and only take as much out as you need.
You don't need to be cashing this whole thing in, ever.
And so I would not let that be a concern.
There is zero chance of her investment going to $0.
That would mean we're in an apocalyptic situation
where every company in America has gone bankrupt.
I think the last thing we'll be concerned about
is our 401k balance at that point.
So I hope that helps.
Yes, Rachel, I will be there too if Winston will let me in.
That's what I'm...
Have a friend with a bunker.
I know, I need to get one.
Well, we don't have one.
You're telling me you don't have a bunker.
We don't have a bunker.
I feel like Winston is prime demo
for having a bunker. Yeah, I have a bunker. I feel like Winston is prime demo. No, he would like having a bunker.
Yeah, I know. I know he would be.
No, but he's more like he's more like live on live off the land.
Like he could figure it out if it all went.
That's true.
Hell in a hand basket.
I think he wins. I don't know.
I trust my husband.
Winston would somehow figure I think we could find water.
He I think he could be a deer.
I don't know if this was the Hunger Games. Witness could win Winston would be beat Katniss ever. If this was the Hunger Games,
Winston would beat out Katniss.
I don't know.
But yeah, all I have to say, Jamie,
tell your mom we'd stay in,
but talk to a SmartVest or Pro for sure
to look at your long-term,
what to do, what decisions to make
in these next 10 years for her.
I know, she could live to be close to 100.
I've had a lot of family members,
and my wife's family.
Nana, 96.
We celebrated her birthday this weekend.
96.
That's amazing.
I know.
And we had another family member on the cruise with us.
Oh, my papaw.
He's 96 too.
Yes.
That's amazing.
I know.
Wild.
Had a good time.
All right.
Wendy is up next in Boise.
What's going on, Wendy?
Yeah.
Hi.
Thanks for taking my call.
I have a question. My husband and I are 52. We're
both entrepreneurs. About two years ago we sort of had like a panic. Well it was coming but like
a panic wake up call that we weren't invested anywhere for retirement or anything. We started
investing a ton of money about what would you say honey no per month hi honey
tell him we said hi oh can you they said hi to you basically at this point today
we've got a hundred thousand dollars invested and we are doing about four
thousand dollars a month his income because the nature of his business is that it's seasonal and
so they'll be like ebbs and flows with like slower, you know, slower months and
then really good months but on average he brings in about around eight grand
and I bring in around five thousand. My income comes from a network
marketing that work that is just residual income so I like I have the
ability to continue to work but but we, in the last
couple of years, I invested in, uh, like a continuing education, something that
was $8,000 and I helped one of my daughters buy a car, so we have $14,000 in debt.
We've never carried debt before, but we have it now, but our $4,000 per month
investment makes things really tight.
So my question for you is,
should we invest less for right now and get that debt paid down or should we stay the course and
just make more money to get the debt paid down? I mean you'll be done with this debt in 90 days. If
you just hunker down pause investing for 90 days that's not going to put a big dent in your
investments but it will make a huge impact on your piece and your margin. Okay. Okay. That's what I was wondering. So, so my husband just popped
the head on him. So yeah, he's saying like, just hunker down for the next 90 days, stop investing
and get the debt paid off. Yeah. You said, you said you have 13 K in debt, 14 K? What do you want to do
Wendy? What does he want to do? I'm curious if y all have conflicting... Well, I think for me, I was more panicked about retirement.
Like all of a sudden, a couple years ago, we have six kids, we have a large family.
You know, I don't want to be dependent on anybody and we've lived a kind of a...
You know, being an entrepreneur sometimes is a little unpredictable.
So we've lived a life where we've worked really hard, we've invested a lot. And so all of a sudden I was like, oh my gosh, you know
If if this business doesn't last forever
I want to make sure we set ourselves up in a really good place where we can still fly to see our grandkids and
You know give gifts to everybody and all that kind of stuff. Do you guys have any money saved outside of investments?
Yeah, we usually try to we try to follow that two to three months, but it's kind of gotten eaten up
with some debt. And that debt might be 20 grand because with the other business,
we kind of hold short term that I try to get paid off every month.
And sometimes I don't have to have, you know, for work or personal and so it can be 20, but yeah.
This might be four or five months of debt pay down,
of just getting aggressive.
And then maybe saving up an emergency fund.
So maybe another four months of saving.
So let's say eight months from now, you're back to investing,
you're still gonna be okay.
I just crunched the numbers for you.
Yeah, that's my question.
Okay, that's my question is I get,
I'm more panicked about retirement than he is
I feel like oh my gosh, if we stop doing this like we're gonna be old and you're fine Wendy here
So tell her the this is I just popped in some numbers. You told me you're 54
You have a hundred thousand saved 52
52 even better. Okay, let's say you don't even start investing again until you're 53
Let's say 53 to age 67. You keep this up for grand a month
Nothing changes. You don't get any raises. You don't make more money. You will have
1.85 million dollars in that one account
Wow, that's at a 10% rate of return
Which is what we've seen over decades in the stock market if you invest in good draw stock mutual funds
So let that give you some peace. Yes, you're gonna be working a little longer
But you'll likely be making more money as time goes on.
Yeah, and y'all need to go plug in these numbers
and mess with the calculator because you like,
I mean, that's facts.
That's what you'll see.
And then sit down with an investment professional
and really map it out.
But pay off your debt.
Y'all need to pause everything.
Pay off the debt, get some cash buffer in your lives.
That's gonna create the peace like what George is saying.
And then you guys can go full on investing and you're going to be 100% fine.
So you're on the right track. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show, Open Phones at 888-825-5225.
If you are tired of living paycheck to paycheck, feeling like you can't get ahead, you gotta
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Frank is up next in Charleston.
How can we help you today, Frank?
How you guys doing?
It's an honor and pleasure to talk to you.
Rachel, you gotta give us the top 10 reasons why it's so tough to be a child of Dave Ramsey
again.
I heard that about 20 years ago.
Oh my gosh.
That's when I spoke in high school.
Throwback.
Wow.
Golly, Frank.
That's crazy.
You must be ancient, Frank.
I am.
I can get my discounts at Dunkin' Donuts for coffee now.
That was what?
Probably, that was like a 2003 time?
Yes.
Yeah.
Probably right around there.
Simpler times.
That's crazy.
What ails you today, Frank?
You've been listening a long time.
Have you followed the principles?
Yeah, you should be.
Why are you calling us, Frank?
Uh-oh.
What'd you do?
So I have a brother-in-law who is just a big dumb animal and I love him dearly and he came
to me and says, hey, I got 20 grand. I'm going to put down on a car, but I need help. Obviously,
I need help. And I said, you got 20 grand? Okay, fine, I'll do it for you. So I co-signed for
him.
Oh, your big dumb brother-in-law, is what you said?
Yeah.
You got in the mud with this animal, my friend. We can't tell the two apart. We don't know
who's dumb and who's smart.
I know. And all I can hear in the background when I got done doing this is Dave saying
and reciting scripture to me saying one who signs debt for another
is stupid.
Yeah, that's right.
That's the King James Bible.
That sounds like him.
So I'm like, why did I do this?
And him, not Dave, God.
Yes.
God sent it.
So now I'm in the process of either just letting this go into a volunteer repossession because I don't need
it, I don't want it, and he's going away for a very long time on a vacation, an unwanted
vacation.
Is he going to prison?
Yes, he is.
Oh boy.
Okay.
So anyway, yeah, so now it's an $1,100 car payment and...
Goodness gracious, what kind of car was this?
It was a Chrysler, brand new Chrysler 300.
Can you sell it?
Well, I can sell it.
So either way I can sell it, but I did the buyout is 62 on it and to sell
it it's gonna be around maybe 50. Is that private party or is that trading?
Yeah that's that's private party. I listen to your show all the time George.
Okay so you're gonna be your 12 underwater. He obviously has no money. He's going to prison and you do you have money?
I do but I don't I don't want to do this. I don't want to you already did it my friend.
It's just gonna add insult to injury. You understand what's going to happen with the
repo right? They're gonna sell it at auction for like 15 grand and you're still gonna owe
the difference. Yeah, it doesn't get you out of it and so it's gonna be even worse if you do
the repo. So you might as well control the variables here and sell it for
as much as you can and then even you know take the cash as a stupid tax and
go all right I owe 12 grand to get this out of my life. That's the only way out
of this that is going to leave you with the least amount of harm. Okay. Because it's currently what we owe on it right now to get this up to, is like $5,200.
So it's up for repossession right now. So I am in South Carolina. This car is in Arizona.
So I'm trying to work with my sister-in-law.
Are you saying that you're behind on payments by five grand?
Yes.
So with penalties and taxes and this and that.
So they're out, they're going to find this car eventually if I don't come up with it.
You're going to have dog the bounty hunter at your door, man.
I would not go through with this.
This is not the way you want to go, Frank.
So do you have five grand to get current on payments? I do, but my wife won't give it to me. Oh boy. Does she have
control of this money or she just super angry? No, she's mad at you. She's mad at you. She's
like, don't take that out of her. Okay, well it's going to cost you guys as a family a
whole lot more than five grand if you do it the wrong way. And so she's gonna
be you're gonna be sleeping on the couch. You might as well live in this car at this
point.
Yeah, that's kind of what I was thinking. That's kind of where we're at right now. Because
you know,
did you do it without her without talking to her?
No, I did it with talking to her and she said don't. Oh no. And you did it anyways.
You know what else Proverbs says?
What is it?
Who could find a virtuous wife for her worth as far above
her in the heart of her husband safely trust her and he will have no life again.
Yeah.
Oh man, Frank.
Yeah.
Ouch, man.
This hurts.
So you got to go to her with all humility and say, I'm so sorry.
I'll make it up to you.
I'm so sorry.
But this is George's point for real, for real, Frank.
You guys are going to end up paying more if this ends up getting repo'd.
So it hurts at the front end to pay it all.
Get rid of, do it.
You know, pay the, pay the backlog, sell it, pay the difference.
All of that is gonna be so much less painful
than the dragging through this repossession
and then having to end up owing even more on the back end.
So go ahead, rip the bandaid off.
Yeah, they could sell this car for 30
and now I'm into it for 30.
And you'll be lucky if they sell for 30.
I mean, they're gonna sell it for bottom dollar
at auction because they don't give a rip and they're gonna put you on the hook for the
difference plus fees and so I would get current as fast as possible, sell it as fast as possible.
How long ago did you co-sign it?
Probably almost a year ago.
Okay, yeah.
I've been trying to get out of it for the past year and a half.
He's like, oh, I'm gonna get it.
I'll get it in someone else's name
or I'll take care of it.
I'll get you off this in six months, Frank.
No worries.
Yeah, if a sketchy lender doesn't trust you
to give you a loan,
maybe you shouldn't trust that person.
You know what I mean?
So does your brother-in-law have any money
that you can get access to?
If he's going to prison, he might as well leave you
with a parting gift.
No.
Sounds like he was broke to begin with though.
Yeah, I figured.
Yeah, he was.
Yeah, he was broke to begin with and just,
yeah, big mistake, big mistake.
So I just wanted to get that.
Well, how much money do you have liquid?
Between savings, anything else you could sell?
So it's probably, you know, 10 to 12,000 bucks.
So you don't even have the money to make good on this deal?
No, I mean, I don't have the money to pay.
Like you can get current on payments, but you don't have the money to pay. Like you can get current on payments,
but you don't have the difference in cash.
Yeah, no, I don't have the difference in cash.
So it's gonna be, well, I might.
I've got five closings this week, so.
Oh, good.
Okay, let's hope that if that doesn't work out,
you can go to your local credit union
and take out a personal loan for the difference
and then clean that up fast.
That's my, that was, I've got an appointment with the credit union tomorrow.
Okay.
Good.
Good.
I hope they're kind to you and I hope you can clean this mess up and I'm glad you learned
the lesson and I hope everyone in America did too.
Never co-sign for anything.
Never co-sign.
I'm going to write, I'm writing that on the back of my truck right there.
Don't co-sign for anyone.
Never ever.
Are you out of debt, Frank?
Outside of this?
No, that's another 45 minute conversation.
But I've got my notepad here of everything I've got.
And it's still-
Man, that Total Money Makeover event you went to in 2003
didn't really stick, did it, Frank?
No.
Well, it did.
It did for a long time.
And then, you know, I kind of, you know,
you wander your way back into debt
and you can't wander your way out.
So he knows the quotes.
He's quoting them.
I've got them all, believe me.
Frank's got the bumper sticker.
Oh, Frank.
We like you, Frank.
Listen, you can get back on the horse.
We believe in you, Frank.
We are rooting for you.
The number one reason I don't cosign for anyone, Rachel,
I don't know if they're going
to be a future criminal.
Are they going to be in jail?
That's now added to my list of fears.
Well, I don't want to hitch my wagon to somebody's death.
Unbelievable.
I know.
All right.
Everyone, let's learn from Frank.
If you hear smart advice 20 years ago, take it.
Take it the first time.
And listen to your virtuous wife.
That's right.
Amen.
These days, the Internet is chock-full of so-called investing advice from random goobs with zero qualifications.
Listen folks, you deserve guidance from someone who knows what the flip they're talking about.
That's why I recommend the SmartVestor program.
Smartvestors can help you find a professional financial advisor who can teach you to make your
own best decisions with your own money. Get connected at
ramsysolutions.com slash smart vester again ramsysolutions.com slash smart
vester. Ramsey Solutions is a paid non-client promoter of participating pros.
Learn more at ramsysolutions.com.
From the Ramsey Network, this is The Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do
work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I'm George Campbell here with Rachel Cruz as my co-host today, also my co-host on Smart
Money Happy Hour, which you can check out on the Ramsey Network or wherever you listen
to your podcasts.
Tim is going to kick us off in Jamestown, New York.
What's going on, Tim?
Hey, good afternoon, Rachel and George.
It's a real pleasure to speak with you today.
You as well.
Thank you.
We actually visited Ransley Solutions about three years ago.
How did it go?
Rachel, we got to meet you.
Oh, good to talk to you again.
My son and daughter logged in to their debt-free screen.
Oh, that's awesome.
That's fun.
Yeah.
So great.
Yeah.
We have a great audience today as well that is here.
We love it.
So fun. I love it. Oh good. Yeah, that was one of the highlights of the last decade for me was being at
Ramsey Solutions. It's an amazing place.
A decade? Wow.
That's big.
Yeah.
I'm lucky to be top five on any list. How can we help? Well, so a question for you.
My mother-in-law has told my wife that she wants to start giving her some money each
year out of her 401k account.
She says between her pension and her social security, she has more than enough to live
off of.
And she wants to start giving some of her wealth to her children to enjoy now. Love it. Yeah, it sounds great. But we're not sure what we should do in
this situation. I know my mother-in-law met with an attorney who advised her that he can give away
up to maybe $18,000 a year with no tax implications. Sure, she won't have to, you know, there's a gift form.
I mean, you can give up to what, 14 million per person
out of your estate.
So how wealthy is she?
I don't know, but I know she's fine.
Like what she said, just between her pension
and social security, she lives very comfortably.
Yeah, I take her word for it.
Okay, yeah, well, the only thing she takes out of her 401k
is the minimum she's required to take out each year.
Yeah, the RMD.
Yep, yep.
And she gives most of that away to charities.
What a woman.
So she wants to start, yeah, she's wonderful.
She's done very, very well over the years.
She and my father-in-law, who passed away quite a while ago.
But they've done very well. we're very proud of them.
So what's your fear here?
What's the hangup?
Well, yeah, one of our fears is,
well, I guess we never saw this coming,
so it kind of rocked it a little bit.
Yeah, took you off guard.
No, absolutely.
But one of our fears is there is some history
of dementia in her family.
Like, she's the youngest of five sisters, and several of her older sisters ended up
having to go to skilled nursing.
We're praying very hard, she never does.
But our concern is, well, what if she does?
You know, do we want to take her money if she might need it
when she goes into that?
And, you know, we just, we want to,
we want to take care of her first and foremost
and make sure she's, you know,
doing the right thing with her resources.
Well, it sounds like 18,000 out of her nest egg.
Is that a big portion?
Does she have a million in the nest egg?
I wish I knew.
I think that would help me feel better about it. I think that would
give you some peace because we don't know how much she has. If she has $200,000 in this account and
she's giving 20 grand away, that might give me some pause. But if she has a million and it's
producing $100,000 of income per year on average or at least in growth, then I'd go, okay, that's,
you know, and if it's on her volition between her pension and social security to give this money, so I would accept it knowing
that we might need to consider future medical care for her.
Yeah, if you asked her if she would show you guys her whole financial picture, would she
or is she a private person and she wouldn't?
I'm not sure she would, but we can give it a try.
My wife has one brother, so maybe the two of them can get together with her and maybe
she'd share.
Okay.
Yeah.
Did she say how much she's going to give?
I know their attorney said 18 grand would avoid the gift tax forms and all that, but
is that what she's decided on?
Well, she already gave my wife and my brother-in-law $10,000 each already.
Um, and I, I don't know if she wants to give 10,000 a year, but she said up to
18, it was kind of unclear what she was going to do.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
So I think from like a, um, like a family boundaries, moral, you know, the whole
conversation, um, we're seeing more and more
of this of people while they're alive want to start passing their inheritance
to their kids or to their family versus dying and you guys get it all, you know,
upon her death or something. And so, so it is becoming more common and I think
your hesitations are right in the sense of, hey, we want to make sure that she's
taking care of herself first and foremost.
And so if I was her daughter, that's probably how I would present it.
I'm like, hey, mom, you know, this is incredible.
Like we were not expecting this.
I'm so honored that you're, you know, choosing to be so generous with us.
But I would love just to sit down and kind of see everything, map everything out and
just walk through a couple of situations that could arise here in the next 10, 15, 20 years,
and make sure that you're taken care of.
We wanna make sure you're good.
And just kind of start that conversation
and look at those numbers, look to see if there's a plan,
if she has even long-term care insurance.
I mean, I don't know, but get some of those answers.
And then I think you guys would feel better
at accepting the gift in its entirety, knowing that she's good, she's taking care of herself, she's being wise for
her.
And it's just you guys get the repercussions of a blessing of someone that's done really
well and that's an honoring legacy, you know, for her to see you guys use what she and her
husband had built for so long.
So I think it's amazing.
Yeah, yeah, it is a real honor. It's a real blessing. What are you guys gonna do with the money?
Well, I guess that was kind of our next question. I mean, we've been saving for retirement. We've been debt-free
completely debt-free for
six years. I forgot when we paid off the house. Awesome. Congrats. Yep. Yep.
We've been out of out of consumer debt for decades and finally paid our house off Awesome. Congrats. Yep. Yep. We've been out of consumer debt for decades and
finally paid our house off several years ago. And it sounds like your kids are doing very
well for themselves. Oh, our kids are all doing great. They're all on board with all
the Ramsey teaching. They're all debt free. How do we clone you guys? This is amazing.
I don't know. America would be in a different place, Tim. I love it. Well, here's what I
always say. Never block a blessing.
So if she wants to give the money,
I would accept the money.
If you want to invest the money,
knowing one day we might use it to help pay for her care
and kind of it goes full circle, that's fine too.
Cause you guys have a lot of options
with what you do with it.
And chances are you're going to have so much money
when that we're ready to cross that bridge,
you'd be able to cover the care
without even thinking about it. And it sounds like you're the we're ready to cross that bridge, you'd be able to cover the care without even thinking about it.
And it sounds like you're the type of people to do that.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's what we're leaning towards is maybe investing that money, at least short
term to see how things go.
I think that's wise.
What would be the best tool to invest that in if we do that?
If you didn't want to do it in retirement to where it was a little more flexible because how old are you too? I'm 58 and my wife is 59. Okay so
you're on the cusp of being able to access retirement funds but if you wanted
to just keep it liquid I would just open up a taxable brokerage account and just
park it in an S&P 500 index fund and just let it ride and you know who knows
what the market will do but that that should give you around that 10%
over a long period of time.
And that money should double for you every about seven years.
So 10 grand one year, 10 grand the next year,
10 grand the next year, you know, 10 years from now,
you could be looking at 200 grand sitting in that one
account from just parking the money.
And if you chose to use it, nothing wrong with that either.
Cause likely you guys are going to have multi-million dollars
if you're doing it right 10 years from now.
And so you should have no problem paying for that care.
I love it. Just responsible people
helping other responsible people.
What a best case scenario this is.
We'll take it all day.
Well done, Tim. Well done. And so here's a plot twist no one warns you about.
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Two weekends are on sale now for the Money and Marriage Getaway featuring none other
than my co-host Rachel Cruz and our friend Dr. John Delaney.
Spend three incredible days in Nashville with your spouse learning the tools to strengthen
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slash getaway or click the link in the show notes if you're listening on YouTube or podcast.
I know Rachel's already prepping for that.
It's one of the best events we do, I think, George. It's one of the most fun. I mean,
if you guys know Dr. John Delaney, he's a hoot. And I mean, just to do a full weekend with people is fun.
You get to really create a connection and a moment.
Yes, there's something about being with the same group of people over the course of two
to three days and you're like, oh yeah, you know, you recognize people.
It's like this camaraderie that's built.
Yes, and it's fun.
Like yes, they talk about serious stuff.
Yeah, we get into it.
And we go there, it's vulnerable, but it's not like a crisis,
very like, you know, just gripping yourself the whole time.
It's not, yeah, we get real, we get real real quick,
but also it's enjoyable and fun.
So it's all the things, so come join us.
It's great.
ramsysolutions.com slash events.
All right, John is in Reno, Nevada.
Up next, what's going on, John?
Hey guys, how are you?
Great.
What's your question today?
Awesome.
So, um, thank you for taking my call.
I appreciate it.
Um, I bought, my wife and I bought, purchased a house from a family member and the family
member has asked us specifically not to pay off the
house early. So I don't know if I get stuck at Baby Step 6 or do I move to Baby Step 7.
Why are they asking that? I think they're trying to leave that as a gift for after they pass away.
And I don't think they, they didn't want their tax bracket messed with it either.
I don't understand.
Did you finance it through them?
Correct, yes sir.
Oh, so they're saying, hey, if you pay us back all of this money too soon, it will count
as income for us and kick us up in the tax brackets?
Is that their concern?
Correct, yes sir.
By paying it off early.
So let's say you paid $50,000 toward your mortgage, which is them.
That's $50,000 of income for that year that they have to report.
Correct, yes sir, yes sir. What's the terms of this mortgage? Is this official or is this
just like a handshake agreement? No, it's official. Everything's written out. Okay.
What would happen if you just decided to refinance and get out of this deal and have the mortgage
be on your terms? I don't think they would, I don't think they want that.
I think the, it's, it's my wife's father.
And I think he's more trying to keep that as basically like a steady form of
income for when he retires.
And then, um, ultimately whatever's left, it's, it wouldn't be paid off
within the amount of
time he knows that and his intention is at that point when he passes it's yours
so he's wanting you guys to be paying the essentially the mortgage payments
and he's using that money for retirement is what you're saying I believe I
believe that's that's what it is, yeah.
But your names are on the deed solely?
What's that stuff?
Are you and your wife's names on the deeds on your own?
Her dad is not on the deed?
Uh, her dad, yes, yes.
My wife and I are on the deed, no, I'm sorry.
The deed is still his name.
That's the worst.
That means you don't own the house
that you are paying down.
Until he would pass away, correct.
This feels crazy, man.
Okay, so I'm trying to figure out what he's doing.
I think I've got it.
He's trying to leave this to you guys
so the house will be, you won't have the step up,
it'll have the step up basis.
Versus just selling it to you outright.
But then why make you guys pay?
Because he can't afford it?
I'm not entirely sure of that.
I just, this was a, you can't go back in time and undo it, but I would undo it if I could.
This has left you guys in a very precarious situation where he's getting all the benefit.
You're just renting a house from him that hopefully becomes yours one day.
Essentially, yeah.
So therefore, I would not pay it off early because you don't even own it.
If you paid it off today, it doesn't make you the owner of the house. That's the scariest part.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
And if you buy it from him today, that changes the basis price because it becomes the market
value of that home.
Yeah, I hear what you're saying.
So if he bought it for $200,000 and now it's worth $600,000 as you're living in it, well,
if he just passed away and left it to you, that price, that basis would step up.
And so if the house is worth $600,000, you would owe taxes on anything above that when
you sell it.
Oh, okay.
And so I think that's part of it is he's trying to avoid some of this tax situation, but he's
tied you guys to this thing in a really terrible way.
Would this be the house you bought otherwise?
And would it be the price point you bought it?
I'm sorry, can you say it one more time, sir?
Is this the house you would, if you had any choice in whatever house you bought, would
this be the house you chose and the price point that you would choose?
Yes, sir.
It's been, it's, it was his mother's originally and when she passed
away she said make sure that we get it. So it was given to him and then he is, we
are buying it from him. But you're not buying it. If you buy
something from him it becomes yours and you just told me it's not yours even if
you paid it off today. And the grandmother told him it becomes yours and you just told me it's not yours even if you paid it off today.
And the grandmother told him to give it to you all right?
Was it paid off?
Yes.
So he created a mortgage out of thin air in order to create income for himself.
I think so, yes.
He wanted a steady form of income for after,
an additional form of income for after he retired.
I feel like there was a better way to do that
than you guys renting it from him while he's alive.
Okay.
So is he able to work right now?
Yes, sir, he works.
Okay, I'm just picturing this.
What would happen if you guys,
you can't even sell the home because you don't own it. Do you understand how dangerous this is?
He doesn't feel like it is because it's going to go in the will, right?
Maybe, hopefully, one day. But you guys are, until then, you're in these weird handcuffs.
How old are you guys, John, you and your wife?
I'm 33 and my wife, just so funny.
What happens if you guys get a job in another city and decide
to move?
We, we can't really we're kind of tied to our area.
Well, yeah, you're tied to that house. You have no equity.
Think about it. Let's say you pay off you pay this thing down
100 grand, you have built $ dollars in equity in this home.
For under your name. It's all now in the dad's name.
And he's not really giving you anything. If you paid it all down, you could have done
that with a normal home. There's no benefit to you guys at this point.
Okay.
All the benefit is on his side.
It's all on his side. And just to say that you guys are living in the grandmother's house
that she wanted passed down to you.
You know what I'm saying?
There's nothing here for you all.
When he dies, how old is he?
In his 50s, 60s?
He's in good health.
He's 64.
All right.
So Pops is going to be living for 30 more years.
Yeah, he's 93 and you still don't own a home.
Yeah.
Is he going to give you the deed when he paid off?
Like I don't understand.
Well, and that's the thing.
He's asked us not to pay it off.
He doesn't want it.
His taxes mess with.
Dude, I would get out of this deal and just go rent somewhere else and he can rent it
out and when he passes, he can still deed it over to you. That's honestly what I would do. I'd rather you go build your own wealth because
there's too many variables and they're all in his favor right now. So I would personally get out of
the situation. He can rent it out if he wants income. I think he's using you guys as a scapegoat
in all of this and I don't like it. I'm not saying he's a bad person. You're easy renters, easy situation.
Now, I don't know if we can.
I mean, we've signed a contract and everything.
I don't know if we can just up and leave.
Man, you signed up for a mortgage
with a house you're not owning.
That scares me.
I would work with an attorney
and see if there's any way out of this thing.
You didn't get the deed in y'all's name.
That's the only way I would continue. Yeah. And I don't care what that does to his taxes or his
inheritance plan. You guys need to do this in a way that is wise and less risky.
This is The Ramsey Show. 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. That's ramzesolutions.com slash agent.
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Kyle is in San Francisco up next. Welcome,
Kyle. How are you doing?
I'm good. How are y'all doing?
Great. How can we help?
Thanks for having me on the show. So me and my wife have had this plan to purchase a house
about three and a half years from now. And I've recently been getting more into my finances and actually listening
to the show and just trying to figure out how we're going to do it with how much debt we're going to have.
Do you currently have debt?
I currently have about $50,000 in debt, but we're going to have a lot more of that in three and a
half years when my wife graduates from her grad school.
Oh boy.
What's it going to be?
How much?
So it's going to be close to $200,000 because she's getting her doctorates in veterinary
medicine.
In what?
Vet?
Veterinary medicine, yes.
How much will she be making when she graduates?
Close to what I make, which will be around 150,000.
Okay, and you guys are, are you legit in the Bay Area?
So I'm only over here for work. I'm going back home to Mississippi in three and a half years when she graduates in three and a half years.
Is she in Mississippi?
Yes, she comes and sees me every once in a while,
go home and see her every once in a while.
We might do what we can.
Oh boy.
How long have you guys been married?
We've been married for a little over a year.
We've been together for nine years.
Okay.
Can you find a job that's either remote
or in Mississippi to be closer to her?
So the job I currently do,
I worked this job in Mississippi.
I'm only here on a temporary contract.
Okay.
Okay, for how long?
Just to help for the next three and a half years.
Oh, it is for three and a half years. That's not very temporary.
Yeah, it's not very temporary, but... Okay. Well, that's neither here nor there.
You're asking how you're going to afford a house in Mississippi?
Yes, sir. Okay. Well, the good news is, combined,
you're going to have a $300,000 plus income three and a half years from now.
Maybe even more.
Hopefully you'll get a raise a little bit, maybe.
And so in three and a half years, you're going to be able to clean up at least your debt
and maybe start knocking hers out or at least have her stop accumulating it.
Can we stop the bleeding now?
Has she already taken out all the loans she's going to need?
Yes.
So a lot of it's scholarships, but the loans she has to take to grad school, it's
pretty much already set in stone. And it's on a deferment, so she doesn't have to pay
them back until six months after she graduates, is when she has to start paying her loans
back.
What's your 50K in debt? So I've got $18,000 in her car.
I still have $25,000 on my truck.
I've got about $2,000 in seal loans, which will be paid off pretty soon.
And then together we have about $8,000 in credit card debt.
Okay.
How aggressively have you guys been tackling this debt?
Has it kind of just been minimum payments and throwing a little extra when we can?
Yes, we've stopped the credit card stuff.
We've cut them up, thrown them away, stopped using credit cards, and we're trying to, we're
working on trying to get those paid off.
As far as the truck and the car, we're just making normal payments on those.
And my student loan debt will most likely be paid off in a month or two
So she's just in school right now. Is she full-time in school or is she working? Yes
Okay, what?
Full-time. Okay, how much are your cars worth?
So my truck is currently worth maybe a little over 40,000. Oh
Okay, you can sell it and net $15,000?
Yes, technically, yeah.
Okay.
And how about hers?
Her car's probably worth about $20,000.
Okay.
So you can net $2,000 for hers.
That gives you $17,000 total.
Could you buy two used cars for that amount?
Enroll them for the time being?
So I'm actually driving a company truck right now.
I'm not even driving.
Oh, good. You won't even miss it.
Sell it yesterday.
That's perfect.
At least sell yours right now.
And net that 15 and buy yourself something used in cash.
Yeah, because here's what I'm feeling, Kyle, if I were to be honest.
So I just feel like you guys cutting up the cards, the credit cards, was a great first step.
But I mean, it's like, yeah, you guys are just used to living what I would say is very normal.
Yeah, we want to go to school here. We can't afford it. We'll take out some student loans.
We want some cars. Can't afford them. We'll just take out some loans.
We'll get some credit card debt over here.
My job's over here.
Your school's here.
We're going to live apart for three and a half years.
It just kind of feels a little bit just kind of like hodgepodge or something.
I don't know.
And I think there's something would be really great for you all is to have some strict structure
around an element of your life.
And I would put money as that category.
And to say, what if we did things so differently
on how we've handled money thus far,
because so far it's not like looking great, you know?
And what if we just did the complete opposite
of what we've been doing and actually have some level
of like this healthy control and a plan in place
while these other parts of our life
are just kind of out there, right?
I mean, like school, like she's gonna graduate.
I don't know, it just kind of feels out there.
There's something to me that's like,
I just want you guys to have like a firm plan in place
that's uncomfortable for y'all for a little bit,
which would be good, meaning sell the cars,
like get rid of the debt, get rid of the car payments.
And Kyle, you start saving up a ton.
And you can knock out your student loan.
You guys can knock out this eight grand.
You could start making some big progress right now
while she's in school.
And then when she graduates,
you guys have a fleshed out plan
that when you're making 300, maybe 350,
I don't know if you're starting to make more,
and then you'll have at that point then 200,000 if you've
paid off all the debt in the next three and a half years, you'll have $200,000 on a $300,000
salary and to make a crazy goal of what if we paid all of the student loans off in a
year in 18 months, and then we could save like crazy because we have great incomes for
an emergency fund to down payment on a home.
Like you guys could start getting some major traction, but I feel like you guys need like
a little bit of like this like zap.
Some urgency.
In your, in your spirit or something, you know, to some radical change needs to occur.
And I think selling the cars, you guys could probably just pay them off.
But I kind of like the idea of just doing something.
Drastic.
Yes.
To kind of feel a little bit of the shock therapy.
If you yeah. Yeah. So that's what I would do. I mean, on your own, Kyle, you're Are you bringing
home like 8k a month right now? Yes, just about. Okay. And how much of that do you need to live on
for expenses, bills, insurance, all that? Well, California to be more expensive than I originally thought, but so I needed
at least probably $5,000 of that to live off of.
Okay, so that leaves you with $3,000.
And so if you sell this truck, that leaves you with what?
$18,000 plus $10,000, so that's $28,000?
You getting that?
Yes.
So you'll be done with that debt in nine months at this rate if you do nothing else but throw every extra cent of margin
Toward your debts and that's if she keeps the car by the way
Yeah, so nine months from now you're completely debt-free and then keep living like that and then keep living like that save your emergency
Fund or you know at this point start paying off for student loans
You don't have to wait for them to be in deferment. I start attacking them as soon as you can
Yeah, especially since there's no interest accumulating.
Yeah. And so you think it would be okay to pull a mortgage on a house when she graduates?
No, I would not buy... This three and a half year plan, I don't know where this number
came from, but you are not ready to buy a house until you're completely debt free with
an emergency fund and a down payment. That might be five year plan.
But guess what?
You also will have an amazing income on the other side of this.
So take advantage of that.
You'll make up for lost time making 300 grand with no debt.
I promise you that.
So don't lose hope, but we need to get started on this now, not waiting three and a half
years from now and hoping that life has changed drastically.
We got to change first.
So I believe in you, Kyle.
You guys are going to be doing real good, but we got to drastically. We gotta change first. So I believe in you, Kyle. You guys are gonna be doing real good,
but we gotta clean up a little mess first.
I wish you guys the best on this journey. So Our scripture of the day, Psalm 121 verses 1 and 2, I will raise my eyes to the mountains,
from where will my help come? My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.
Earl Wilson once said, one way to get high blood pressure is to go
mountain climbing over molehills. Ain't that the truth? Only a guy named Earl can pull
that one off. I love that.
That's funny. That's true.
People who overinflate, over dramatize. I don't know anyone who would over dramatize
anything except for Rachel Cruz.
No drama here.
Rachel does it in fun. I Rachel does it overly emotional. It's
fine. Rachel does it to entertain others. It's never self-serving. Never. So selfless
with your drama. Thank you. All right. Calder is up next in Columbus, Ohio. Calder, thanks
for calling us. Hey, thank you so much for having me. It's been a dream to be on this
show. Absolutely. We're glad to take the call. What's going on in your world?
Yeah, so we are currently paying for our own wedding, me and my fiance for next
year in the San Francisco Bay Area. And her relatives have a lot of strong
opinions on how we should should handle things. And I could use some advice.
Like what? What are their opinions?
Yeah, so a little context. I grew up on the third gen Chinese American. I grew up in the San
Francisco Bay Area. My fiancee, Tina, she grew up in Columbus, Ohio. She's a first gen Vietnamese.
And she grew up in the Vietnamese Catholic Church. I grew up in the Christian church. Her family is very, very traditional in terms
of Catholicism, Vietnamese culture. They really appreciate me and they really love me, but you know, there's some differences in religion and whatnot.
So, you know, they are expecting us to do, you know,
these traditional tea ceremony things and certain Catholic
service and whatnot. And, you know,
we want to have our wedding kind of how we want to,
and we both are on the same page about that. Sure.
At the same time, we're in a conflict of
how do we have our own wedding our way
versus trying to accommodate all of our guests.
Obviously, half the guests are gonna be Vietnamese
and then half of them are.
Do you guys get a say on the invite list
or is it like mom's gonna invite all of her friends
no matter what and now you guys are footing the bill? So I would say for the most part like 90% I would
say we're kind of taking that the invite list however we do feel like we are kind
of forced to kind of invite some people just because you know they do say you
know the blood is thicker than water do we really want to invite them?
Sure. And they're not paying from a financial standpoint you guys are you guys are paying for You know they do say you know the blood is blood is thicker than water do we really want to invite them sure?
They're not paying from a financial standpoint you guys are you guys are paying for everything right?
That's correct. We are gonna be paying for everything you guys talked about the financial piece of this with either side of the family
Have you talked about here's what it's gonna cost or we we're gonna offer to pitch in, or are they not even offered at all?
So our families are pretty generous.
I would expect us to probably cover,
honestly, maybe the cost of the wedding,
which is probably gonna be around 30 or 40,000.
But no, we haven't really brought up the cost with them yet.
I don't know if it's more so like the cost is really not.
Yeah, because you guys have enough money to pay for the wedding.
Is that correct?
That's right.
Okay.
So what I would do, I mean, honestly, Calder, this is like kind of the first bump in the
road of, you know, to a degree, you and your wife become your own family unit.
And that's not- Leave and cleave. Yeah. to a degree, you and your wife become your own family unit.
Leave and cleave.
Yeah, it's not a disrespectful thing,
but this will go on and they will have different opinions
for the rest of your life.
And so this is kind of one of the first benchmarks
of the precedent of how we handle this and their feelings
for how we're probably gonna do it going forward. And so it's gonna be really
uncomfortable, but I would have her take the lead because it's her family. But if you both want to,
but I would let her definitely initiate. She handles her side, you handle your family. Yeah.
And if she wants you with her in the conversation, that's great. But I would sit down with them in person if you can as ideal and in a very respectful, you know, gracious way, you know, tell them
thank you obviously for all that they are and who they are and you guys cannot wait
for this union and life together and all of it. But there are going to make this, there
are going to be decisions that you all make as a family unit that are going to make them uncomfortable.
And mom and dad, here are probably what it's going to be.
There probably is not going to be a traditional cat.
I mean, and I would just go through it and rip the bandaid off.
And again, you're not being disrespectful by any means.
They may take it as that, but that's theirs to carry.
If you do it, go ahead.
And the hardest part is that, so we are very pretty strong Christian believers and they're
more of, they grew up in the Catholic church, but there's like this misunderstanding of
like, you know, we're not following their path and whatnot. But like, at the end of
the day, like we are, you know are following God and we both are. The Nicene Creed covers Catholics, Orthodox, Protestant, under the Christian umbrella.
I mean, genuinely, genuinely.
It is.
The foundation and how the expression comes out is going to look different.
Some people on all ends of the spectrum are very passionate either way.
There's Protestants that are very passionate towards Catholics, Catholics that are very,
you know, it goes all the way.
So again, it's going to be a tension point because they are very passionate about it,
but that's their opinion, right?
You're not going to change that.
But what you can do is control the decisions that you guys make, how you treat them and going forward.
Honestly, it's like it's kind of that it makes it strong.
I mean, honestly, it makes you and your wife, especially since you guys are on the same page and there's not tension between you all.
I think in a stronger, a stronger unit. But that's I mean, that that is so that is very hard, very, very hard.
Because, yeah, there's a lot of opinions and a lot of strong convictions, right?
Especially when you bring in a spiritual element.
They really do.
They feel that.
And on top of that, like, so her family's in Ohio and more spread out on the East Coast
and then, but we're having the wedding back in California.
So like it will be a destination for them to come as well.
So that element of them traveling, you know...
That's upsetting them all.
Insult to injury.
Right.
You're not having a traditional Vietnamese Catholic wedding and we got to travel across
the country and there's not going to be a tea ceremony.
What happened?
What happened to my daughter?
What have you done to her?
Yeah.
Welcome to the first of many disappointments that you will experience within laws.
I know.
There's gonna be very few things you ever do
that make them happy.
I know, the way you raise the kids, I mean, all of it,
it's just gonna, they will have their opinions and-
The best thing you can do is just hold the boundary
while being respectful and kind.
That's right.
Awesome, no, I appreciate the answer
for all your advice and input.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
You're approaching this from the right way. You sound very level-headed. Nothing about
this is trying to be rebellious and irreverent. But there's going to be a point where you
go, this is my new life with my new wife, and at some point I can't ask mommy for her
opinion unless I ask for it, in which case I will take it.
And your parents were from the Middle East. and I do think different cultures, right?
There is a stronger tie, not that us Americans aren't that,
but there is something to be said.
It's a very, there's a closeness there.
I didn't have a traditional Arabic wedding.
I married a very white woman who's out there right now.
My parents weren't opinionated,
because we did the, you know,
I've been a Southern boy now for a long time.
I didn't have my wedding in the old Arabic Baptist church
that I grew up in.
But you know, there's things I'm sure they disagreed with,
but I did have a legitimate camel at my wedding.
So that was my nod to my last name
and the Middle Eastern culture.
And that made my dad very happy.
He spent most of the wedding just engaging with the camel
and taking selfies with it.
So I would call that a win.
So maybe that for Calder, there's some advice.
Get a live animal at your wedding that could distract from the fact there's no tea ceremony.
Oh man, that is hard.
That is so hard.
You know what?
The destination wedding sometimes is great.
Because some people don't end up coming.
And sometimes that's great.
Great. I know. I know I know but
hey my grandma that was able to make that was her last trip wow yeah back in 2018 for our wedding
and so she flew in from where she flew in from boston oh my gosh that's great so shout out she
recently passed rip grandma love you but there you go cherish family honor them but also
you do you don't do anything because someone forced you to. It'll just create resentment in your heart and that doesn't
help any relationship. That puts this hour of the Ramsay Show in the books.
Thank you to my co-host Rachel Cruz, all the folks in the booth keeping the show
afloat. Appreciate you guys listening in. We'll be back before you know it. you