The Ramsey Show - Set Boundaries & Stop the Pattern of Stupidity!
Episode Date: May 2, 2024💵 Sign-up for EveryDollar today - The simplest way to budget for your life! Dave Ramsey & Jade Warshaw answer your questions and discuss: "I can't afford to pay off my credit cards," "Should I le...verage money or pay cash for an investment property?" "My sister-in-law wants us to pay for her vacation..." "Did we mess up by buying my parents' house?" "How should we budget for a wedding?" "Starting a new life after years in prison" Support Our Sponsors: BetterHelp NetSuite Zander Insurance Yrefy Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! 🏦 Take Your 3-Minute Money Assessment - Get a personalized money plan! 📈 For help with investing, get connected with a SmartVestor Pro. 💰 Enter the $3,000 Ramsey Cash Giveaway today! Enter daily to increase your chances of winning weekly $500 prizes or the $3,000 grand prize. 📚Get 20% off bestsellers! Whether you’re ready to kick debt to the curb, want to live a less-anxious life, or looking for growth in your job—there’s hope. 🏠 Find a Ramsey Trusted Real Estate Agent Listen to more from Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
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Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people
build wealth, do work that they love, and create
actual amazing relationships.
Best-selling author, Ramsey personality, Jade Walshaw, is my co-host today as we take your
questions about your life and your money.
888-825-5225 is the number.
Abdel is with us.
I'm sorry.
Hey, Abdel, what's up?
Yes.
Yes.
So I need your help, Ramsey.
I have three different types of loans.
I'm just going to break it down for you.
My first loan is $20,525 in credit card debt.
And the second one is $22,000 in student loans, and the third one is a car loan of $20,211.
Those three loans are equaling the same amount as my income.
So my income is $63,000.
And my question in particular is for the credit card debt.
I'm about to max out my credit card.
And honestly, I'm paying, you know, $1,500, $2,000 a month,
and it's not getting anywhere because of, you know, the interest.
And I'm just trying to weigh my options here and see, you know,
should I not pay and just settle it with the creditor?
Or should I find another option, especially for the credit card debt?
Is it just one card or is it several?
No, just one card.
What do you do?
So I work in the humanitarian sector.
I help refugees.
Okay.
You work in the humanitarian sector and you help refugees?
Yes, but I work in the finance department.
I see.
Okay.
All right.
How old are you?
I'm 28 years old.
Okay.
It's just you?
Or you have kids?
I have a wife and a son.
Wife and a son.
What's your wife make?
My wife, she came from overseas, so she only has a high school education, so she's a stay-at-home mom.
Okay. How old's the son?
He's seven months old.
Okay. So what's been the situation in your life where you can't live on $63,000? tell us more it's it's really you know stupid mistakes um i before you
know before i got married i had no debt besides the student loans and i had twenty thousand dollars
in savings and i think after i got married um especially you know the wedding in our in our
country is very expensive the wedding cost me a loan thirty thousand dollars and then on top of that you know diapers and um you know gold for the for the wife
and and just you know i brought the credit i'm sorry did you say gold yeah yeah i have to buy
gold yes that's how you get married and overseas the gold was alone like ten thousand dollars
okay so you got forty thousand dollars that you didn't have to get married.
And then you bought a $20,000 car you couldn't afford.
Yes.
Yeah.
And I don't think diapers is even on the list here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, okay.
Well, so the answer to your question is that when we have financial problems,
including when I had them, the problems are not the problem, they're the symptom.
And what I'm hearing is you have a tremendous ability to,
you really struggle with saying no to anyone.
And so you're going to have to practice that word.
No, no, no.
We don't have the money.
No, we're not in Congress.
No, I don't care what the culture says.
No, I don't have the money.
No, I can't do something that I don't have the money to do.
No, we can't go over there.
No, I don't want to do this. No, I can't be here right now because I'm having to work extra jobs because I didn't say
no before. Correct. So now you've got extra jobs coming and you're going to sell your car and
that's where you can pay your credit card. So get rid of the car and get you a cheap car and take
three extra jobs and work your brains out and by the way she can do something
i agree and she needs to do something to create some income even with uh even if it's while the
baby's napping she does something on ebay i don't care what she does but she needs to do something
to create some income uh since we've invested $40,000 into her.
You're not wrong.
That was pretty cold.
That was pretty cold, but you're not wrong.
That's true.
You know, that's worth talking about.
Stay-at-home mom.
You know, if that's the choice you want to make, that's true.
That's fine.
But there's something that you can do to earn money,
and there's so many great,
if you don't want to pay the full cost of daycare, there's great mom's day out programs where it can give you some time back seven months old sleep a
lot yeah there's time back open up the computer and start doing something yeah while they're
sleeping there's something you can do and earn some money and abdel you're going to be working
more because you need more money and you're going to be on a really tight budget.
You're not going out to eat.
You're not going on vacation, and you're selling a car that you shouldn't have bought.
And then you can work through this, and you can pay it.
No, you don't let your credit cards go and then not pay a bill that you promised to pay
when you have the ability to do it.
Now, the question is, are you willing to do those things?
And that's going to be the $900 answer.
That's so interesting to me.
I mean, I come from the hillbilly culture, the noble hillbillies, by the way,
which at no point in that culture would anyone have ever paid $10,000
for the opportunity to marry someone. You might have gotten paid paid ten thousand dollars to get someone out of their house but you
wouldn't have paid for it so it's so it's so foreign to me it's so no pun intended but i mean
it's obvious it's something that's a big deal in his culture i'm not 100 not disrespecting that
but i just can't get my head around it because it's not where i come from that's right yeah it's
a lot of money.
$10,000 in gold. $30,000 wedding.
So you're looking at a broke guy who's going to bring your daughter to America and be his wife,
and the culture says you have to give $10,000 in gold.
Mm-hmm.
Wow.
Well, you know, part of it is it just goes to show that culturally, no matter what culture, there's things that if you really put some thought into it, you can say, well, that's a little bit backwards. Right. Like we've got that in our culture. There's I mean, we talk about it every day.
Our culture says, hey, if you need something going into debt to get it, we have you want to education, get a student loan, you want a car, get a car note. And it takes a moment to like you said, you have to look at that and go, does that really make sense for me or really for anybody and it's a head scratcher and then you say no i'm not going to
do that yeah i'm not going to be normal i'm not going to be normal but this is a cautionary tale
i think of how you know what seems like a small amount of debt in quotes twenty thousand dollars
that's i can handle that and then you do another twenty thousand dollars i can handle that in a car
loan and then twenty twenty thousand dollars in student loans that's not that bad and then before you know it
like you said it's the exact amount of your income it's scary to me how fast he went from
having some money and no debt all the way to having no money and a bunch of debt
and it all centered around not saying no to something yeah or not not questioning the
the protocols that's right put in front of you.
So,
and I don't know
that you can.
I'm not sure how this goes.
That's true.
I really don't know
what he's facing on that
because I don't understand it.
Yeah.
But it still has to do with,
no,
can't do that.
Yeah,
you can afford
what you can afford.
Yeah,
don't have the money.
This,
what do you,
I guess,
no,
no,
this is The Ramsey Show.
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jade washall remsey personality is my co-host today. Dave is with us and Dave is in Orlando.
Hi Dave, how are you? Hi, I'm good Dave. Thank you so much for taking my call. Sure, what's up?
Hi, so my wife and I, so we are foster parents and we were taking care of a baby pretty much from a newborn until about eight months.
The mom did great. She got her kids back after she went through some struggles.
Long story short, her case has been closed. She has all her kids back and she is struggling again.
So with pretty much all aspects of life, but financially, she made some poor decisions with a car, ended up breaking
down, and she had to junk it. And she contacted us just for some help financially. We haven't
helped her with money before, but obviously we love her son very much. We want her to succeed.
We know that giving her money is not a long-term solution to anything.
So we're really just trying to think about the best way to approach her, talk to her about,
you know, what's going on, how her finances are, how she can get assistance, build a budget,
et cetera. And she's a very, very shy, closed-off type person, so we don't want to scare her off,
but obviously still wanting to help her.
We're just looking for the best way to maybe approach that.
Well, I mean, all you can do that's reasonable is to coach her,
and the only way you can coach her is to the extent she'll accept the coaching, right?
Right. And I, I talked to her yesterday and she, you know, I,
I asked her if she would be opening to open to having a financial conversation.
Well, my, my wife and I are in good shape. We're very stable.
And if she said she was open to having that conversation,
she said she doesn't really understand debt and just finances in general. And on top of that, I mean, she has three kids now. She's not working,
has a baby who's now a year, and her other two kids are nine and 10, and she just has absolutely
no idea what to do. She can't get daycare for her baby because in order to get assistance through the state she has to have
two paychecks before they'll provide daycare assistance so she is just going crazy and we
feel like she's close to you know getting back to a point where she may make some poor decisions or
drugs or something like that and and yeah.
Well, obviously the financial situation is, again,
the symptom of all the things that have gone on in her life, okay?
But maybe you can coach some of the things in her life by using the financial door to go through.
Having dealt with this a bunch of times over the years, by using the financial door to go through.
Having dealt with this a bunch of times over the years,
the warning I would give you is I would tell you to be very, very clear up front because when you said financial conversation, you meant coaching.
She might have heard money.
You're going to have a conversation about how much money you're gonna give me yes i'll be happy
to have that conversation when you when it's very clear to her that you're not going to give her
money because you're not um that then uh because this is a messed up toxic situation if you start that then she may cut you loose so you need to be ready for that
emotionally okay and so I think um you know what I would offer if I were in
this situation with your wife present I would just say in in person over a cup
of coffee look we love the little boy and that means that we would love to help you.
And our help to you would be that as your older brother
and older sister here that are successful
in a lot of areas of life that you're not yet,
we can show you a better path in a bunch of these areas
and help her get plugged into a good church.
They can help her with the daycare, get
started, let someone do that. But if she starts to see this baby as a ticket to get money out of you,
this is going to get really ugly fast. Right, right, right. Yeah. And so she did move two
hours away from us when the case was finally closed. I guess that was about a month ago. And we did at that time give her $200 to help moving expenses and get a truck to go down there.
So I'm hoping that she doesn't think that that door is already open.
She does. She does. But you're just, the trick is, can you make a trip down there, sit down,
be very clear,
we love you, because we love this baby, we want to coach you and help you.
But it's going to be, we're going to show you how to get on your feet, not we're going
to give you money to get on your feet.
And she may give you the middle finger.
Let me, it's a better than a 50% probability, based on my experience.
But if she, she may have been just dying it's
sad but sometimes folk in these situation will use a baby as a method of manipulation well that's
the thing i would probably caution um against with david just to be really careful because
obviously they love this this little boy and so there's probably um a part in them that wants to
try to control the situation because in their minds like we have the
means like we understand money we understand how to take care of this kid and so I think that they
have to really guard their hearts in this situation because like you said yeah so sad yeah but I think
what she's got to have is she's got to have some mentors and yeah some people in her life that's
why I said plug her into a good church let Let's get her started walking on a character path.
It didn't let her get, because obviously based on what you said, she's been struggling with
that and you're afraid she's going to fall back off of that.
And when she gets that character thing straightened out, then you can show her the mechanics of
the money piece.
But she's going to have to go to work and she's got to feed three kids and we're going
to have to figure out a way to cause her to be able to do that
with some community support,
and that community will help her if she's heading in the right way,
and you can probably line that up.
And I think you're a wonderful person for investing into this,
but just be very careful that you're not being manipulated
because that sometimes is the only skill someone has,
and they're very skillful in some cases.
I'm not saying that's true about her 100%,
but it's just something I would personally be careful with
if I was walking into this.
I'd want my eyes wide open.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Royce is in Dallas, Texas.
Hi, Royce.
How are you?
Good. How are you, Dave? Hi, Royce. How are you? Good.
How are you, Dave?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
So I am a finance, or I guess you could say graduate finance student.
I'm getting my MBA, my undergrad in finance.
Cool.
And so you know how all of them are.
Yep, I do.
They teach you to go out and leverage and so on and so forth.
Yep.
The financial situation that I'm in is I'm completely debt free.
I have a hundred thousand ish something dollars of invested money in Morgan Stanley.
And then I have some other stuff.
There's a 401ks.
I have $30 or 30,000 in on hand cash.
And I have an opportunity to buy a $50,000 house.
Would you leverage some part of it, the renovations?
Would you buy it off cash?
Because my whole thought pattern is if I leave that money working
and do parts of it, so like finance 25, cash 25, cash on the restoration,
it allows some of my money to still be working.
Well, back when you had common sense before you got your MBA,
you would have never done that. Right. And so I agree with you on that partly. Then,
so my thing is, is so do you think that there's ever situations where that would come in? Cause
I know that you got it, right? No, I do not. I do not borrow money and I do not tell people
to borrow money, especially for investment real estate.
Pay cash for it or don't do it because you increase your risk,
and what they don't teach you in the MBA program is to mathematically factor in the risk.
They act like with the formulas they teach you,
the formulas that I learned, the same ones in getting a finance degree,
are fairly simplistic in that they do not address
the risk issue.
And the more you borrow, the more risk you have.
We know that.
And nowhere in anything you learned in that MBA program does it decrease the returns based
on increased risk because of debt.
There's not a formula that they have in that program that shows you that.
And yet, that is reality. So every time you borrow money, you increase risk. The more money you
borrow, the more risk. The less money you borrow, the less risk. And risk does affect return over
the scope of time. And so don't do it. Don't do it. The borrower is slave to the lender.
God is smarter than your MBA professor.
This is The Ramsey Show.
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Jade Walsh, all Ramsey personalities, my co-host.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host.
Open phones here on the Ramsey Show.
Phone number is 888-825-5225.
Emily is in Washington, D.C.
Hi, Emily. How are you in Washington, D.C.
Hi, Emily.
How are you?
Hi, Dave.
Thank you so much for taking my call today.
Sure.
What's up?
We just have a quick question. My husband and I are wondering if we are being selfish with a family financial decision that we're making.
I'm going to preface it by saying that we are in total agreement on this and he would be the one to have a conversation with his family. So the overall situation is that he has many siblings and we
try to get together and go on vacations or just have family gatherings fairly often. However,
his youngest sister does have a very different financial situation than the rest of us have.
So we've covered her expenses anytime we get together and particularly going on vacation.
Usually not a big deal. It's just a few hundred extra bucks.
However, there has kind of been an expectation to pay.
And there is conversation around going overseas to where they are from originally,
where the family is from originally, for a bigger trip in 2025,
which would, if we covered her expenses, it would cost us thousands of dollars.
That's just not in our budget.
It's not something we can do.
It would already be kind of at the top of our budget to begin with. But in kind of expressing this decision,
not being able to cover her, her husband, and her five kids,
it's really ripping apart our family
because we're being told we're being selfish
by not helping her out.
Wait, sorry, it's her husband and her five kids?
Yes.
And who's telling you you're selfish um the other siblings
and how much of it were they covering they were we've always kind of split things fairly equally
and so if we split it three ways it would still be a few thousand dollars for all of us. Can I ask why? Can I ask why? What's the situation that
everybody is floating them? Yeah, that's a great question. So some of it, I would say lifestyle
choices, just in the fact that they live in a small town, her husband doesn't have a big income,
and then she's chosen to stay home and homeschool the kids have a bigger family
the more you tell me the more I'm laughing internally like the more you tell me about
this the more I'm realizing how ridiculous this this expectation is and yeah there's no obligation
anything that you've done before you kind of did set up maybe an expectation but you did that out
of the kindness of your heart as it sounds like the other siblings did but just because someone
is kind and decide that they want to give one time doesn't mean that they're obligated to give
every time and at the whatever limit that other person decides right if i were you i would have
no when i tell you i would lose zero sleep over saying, I'm not going to fund this.
It's too expensive, period.
And you don't have to give a bunch of reasons.
Just, hey, it was fun for us to be able to do that before with this trip.
We're not going to be able to help out.
And by the way, probably going forward, you know, we've decided that the faucet has turned off at this point.
Especially with the way you folk have reacted.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No gratefulness
yeah gratitude turned into entitlement and so um you know the the issues this what you're
discovering and it's sad um and i've run into this everybody's run into this henry cloud talks
about this in his classic book boundaries that um when you someone doesn't respect your boundaries, it means they feel entitled to walk in your yard,
to take your money, they feel entitled to your money.
And then when you set a boundary with a boundaryless person,
roughly 100% of the time it pisses them off.
Almost every time, right? And so once you say you can't
play in the yard it's my yard and you can't come over here there's a fence here you should stay on
your side of the fence you know that's a boundary in other words then the people who have gotten
used to treating your yard like it's their yard yes um and they go oh but we're but we like playing in your yard and so no you
can't play in my checkbook anymore um there's not room for both of us and so i'm going to declare it
mine and i'm going to close the gate the gate was open and now the gate's closed and and since
you're bitching about it i'm going to leave the gate closed forever that kind of goes there too so um that's that's the way i mean and as far as the other siblings
uh whining about it it falls under the category of nunya
nunya business go kick rocks exactly and here's the thing i thought you were going to lay out some
hardship or something that was kind of outside the box, but truly it's choices.
Yeah, choices.
And so you chose not to be able to afford to go on this international vacation with your five children,
which, by the way, most people, I never even saw the ocean until I was a teenager.
So, I mean, I grew up in Tennessee.
So, I mean, come on.
I mean, it's like that's what people that don't have money do.
You know, so you don't get to do stuff that people with money get to do.
It's how that works.
And so, gosh, I'm sorry, though.
I'm sorry it's bringing a pain to y'all.
And I wish I had something other than smart aleck things to say that would actually make this go away because it won't.
But it won't go away.
And so you're just going to have to smile and say,
gosh, I'm so sorry y'all feel that way.
I love y'all, but this is our decision.
And you don't have to, I would not justify it.
I wouldn't talk about the decisions
they need to make different.
I wouldn't talk about enabling.
I wouldn't talk about entitlement or boundaries.
I would just say, this is our decision.
We love y'all.
And gosh, I hope it doesn't, i hope you don't permanently cut us off but if you do then that's what you'll have
to do and gosh i sure hope not but we love y'all and no the good news is you and your spouse are
on the same page that's the only way and you already prefaced it with he's going to handle his own family. Bless his heart. So, yeah, it's a thing, man.
It's a thing.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
I've had some of these conversations.
I mean, when we went broke and lost everything.
So Sharon has five brothers and sisters, and there's 13 grandkids, okay,
of which Daniel is the youngest, okay?
So Rachel's one of the youngest, in other words.
And so that family
they've all done very well and they're wonderful people and everybody gave everybody something at
Christmas well I completely screwed that up because I went broke and I didn't have the money
to give everybody everybody something yes and so we were there at thanksgiving and they're talking about christmas and i said guys um i'm sorry i got bad news i i we did we just can't do that we we just
went bankrupt we don't have any money and so we're gonna have to draw names and the kid and my
suggestion also is the children under 12 get gifts from other people but everybody else is treated as
an adult and gets one gift from another adult,
and we all just draw names.
And no, to their credit, I'm bragging on my wife's family.
They all said, that's a really good idea
because I think this other one sucked.
It was getting out of control,
and I'm glad you brought it up.
But I was kind of, Sharon's like,
they're not going to like that.
And I said, I know they're generous, sweet people.
They're not going to like it, but we don't have any money oh man so we can't play
anymore we don't have the we can't pay the ticket to play in this yeah we can't get into this place
anymore we can't pay the ticket and so this is the only thing we can do and so we love y'all
but and they were instead they were all like well well, thank God somebody else, you know. And so that that family that was 30 years ago.
We've drawn names ever since for 30 years now.
That's great.
So sometimes it's a good result.
But but it wasn't someone that felt entitled.
That's right.
In that conversation instead of a mature, good, solid people who respected the pain
that we were in at the time and how embarrassing it was for us to
have to say that out loud and all of that at that means you imagine sitting at your in-laws
thanksgiving dinner yeah and announcing i have been there and my story didn't go as well dave
oh no oh no you know you caused trouble with the in-laws did you jade maybe we give names we draw names i didn't
know she was that way i wouldn't have known it all right you know you go well here's the thing
we're still drawing names to this day so oh even though there was some kicking and screaming to
begin with but it's okay it's all good now it's a good thing well you know how i feel adults don't
need to buy other adults gifts i heard you talk Rachel and George talking about you the other day on their show, saying that.
I like that.
So there we go.
Get your own blender.
Learn to get your own blender, Aunt Gertie.
This is The Ramsey Show.
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It could happen that way.
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Joshua's in San Antonio, Texas.
Hi, Joshua.
How are you?
Hey, Dave.
How are you doing?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
So my wife and I, a few months back, were presented an offer or deal from my parents
to buy their house from them.
So through them and not a mortgage company, so pretty much like a rent to own,
we had about $60,000 in debt. So we decided to sell our first home and take their deal.
So we used that money to pay off about $30,000 in debt, the equity our the sale of the house so my question is is after we
pay off a little bit more debt which we have about thirty thousand left is it smart for us to
continue to pay the house through my parents or get a mortgage loan so you you simply just took
over the payment there There was no paperwork?
No, there's no payment.
The house is paid for and you're paying them payments.
No, so my parents have a mortgage and we're paying.
We've agreed on a price to buy the house.
The house, the price that they're selling it to us,
quote unquote, is below market value. They're selling it to us at the
appraised, the county appraised, um, which is what 340,000 and market value is like 380.
And what do you guys make? Um, right now I make about $75,000 a year. My wife is with my two kids.
Okay.
And we did have a house we were paying.
That one was about $240,000.
We outgrew that house.
That's why this house was a bigger house for us.
So your take-home pay is what?
About $72,000.
Oh, that's your take-home pay, $72,000?
Yes.
Okay.
All right.
And so we're dealing with like $6,000 a month, and your payment on this mortgage is how much?
$2,000.
$2,000.
That's a lot.
It is a lot.
And so we went from $13,000 at our...
You went from being able to afford your mortgage to not being able to afford your mortgage is what you did.
Yeah.
We did get to pay off, like you said, $30,000.
Yeah, but you still have $30,000 in debt left, right?
Yes.
And you gave your parents thirty thousand dollars already
no we have not paid then um i paid off your other debt that paid off the other
thirty thousand of debt yes i paid off thirty thousand dollars yes i thought you got 60 out
of the house when you sold it no we got 30 out of the house when we sold i had 60 000 in debt oh okay so you got no money now
i have a little bit in my savings and then what we have um
what i make obviously what's in your savings how much savings do you have
right now we have 3 000 in savings okay so 3 000 in, you've got a mortgage that you're paying.
That's a third of your take home.
Dude, you guys have made such a big mess, I don't even know where to start.
This is a disaster.
Here's the problem, okay?
You're a renter.
You do not own the house, and you're not on the mortgage.
And you do not have the money to purchase the house and you're not on the mortgage and you do not have the money to purchase the house because the purchase of the house to get a mortgage will require a uh a down payment
mortgage companies don't just give 100 loans and so you don't have the money to purchase the house
and you can't put the house in your name with that other mortgage on there because that mortgage has what's called a due
on sale clause in it that if they transfer the title to your name at the courthouse,
the mortgage company is going to call that mortgage due in full and foreclose on your butt.
And so you guys have made a huge mess because you didn't know what the flip you were doing.
All of you just thought you could just slop around and this would work out just because you wanted a bigger house
this is awful um so i i think the only way that i can see out of this is for you guys to take six
jobs and quickly put together some money for a down payment how much is the balance on the mortgage? Um, 90,000.
Okay.
And you're buying the house for 300.
Yes.
We're,
um,
they're,
you know,
they're selling it to us.
That's the agreed amount.
Okay.
Yes.
All right.
Um,
yeah,
you're going to have to sit with a mortgage company and figure out how you can,
either your parents gift you another 30,000 out of this remaining equity.
And they show that as a down payment on this house and you get a mortgage and get the house
into your name for God's sakes. Because if your parents have some kind of a problem
that even they didn't mean to have, they are in a car wreck and get sued for $500,000 and the insurance doesn't cover it.
The $500,000 lien will be against this house because it's in their name.
It's not your name.
So everything that they do ends up on this house because it's in their name, not in your
name.
So every day that you sit there acting like this is your house when it's not your house, you's in their name not in your name so every day that you sit there acting like
this is your house when it's not your house you are in dire risk and so that's why this is such
a bad deal well my question is why can't you just agree to be renters why did why why do we need to
jump the gun to buy it why why not say okay because there's nothing that points to any form of
ownership the parents own the house they're on the mortgage they're on the title so you can just sit there and be a renter just be a
renter you can do that get in a better position to where you can buy except you went and rented
a house you can't afford yeah they did you went and rented i mean it's um yeah well they might
have a two thousand dollar payment did that what he said he said two thousand dollars that 90 grand
90 000 so they are they're making profit off of them they're not it's not it's
yeah okay so this is you know there's this was a bad plan top to bottom and i'm not real sure how
you're going to get out of it other than quickly to come up
with a down payment and try to qualify for the mortgage and get the house and the mortgage
into your name.
That's the only thing I can come up with.
The sooner you do that, the better off you're going to be.
Because in the meantime, you're just paying off somebody else's mortgage.
You went from being a homeowner to being a renter.
And if something happens with one of them and there ends up liens on this
property, you're never going to get the property. And believe me, in 35 years of doing what I do,
I run into that a lot because people who do bad deals have a tendency to do other bad deals.
Sure. Yeah, that's a good point. Bad deal, meaning don't know what the flip you guys were
doing. You just wandered backward into this and thought you could pull this off. And so,
yeah, you really need to sit down and start talking about how you can get a mortgage,
how much, how quickly you can save with the down payment to do that. And if you can get any credit
from the equity reduction, from the price reduction towards a down payment, as far as the
way the mortgage company looks at it. In other words, if they're willing to sell it to you for $340,000,
do we instead show it at $360,000,
and the mortgage company shows that $20,000 as a gift from your parents? There's a possibility they can do that.
So I would look into that.
But this is a classic case of I want a bigger house, I can't afford it,
and I did it anyway.
And that's what you got yourself into, Joshua.
I'm sorry.
Wow. I hope you get out of this with your skin. This is the Ramsey Show. Live from the headquarters of Ramsey
Solutions, it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do work that they love,
and create actual amazing relationships.
Jade Walshaw, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Marcus starts this hour in Los Angeles.
Hey, Marcus, how are you?
Hi, you too. Thanks for having me on.
Sure. What's up?
Yeah, I'm budgeting for a wedding wedding we're in the final steps i talked to my dad the
biggest person asked me what would dave say so we talked through that but then i wanted to ask you
and see what would dave say okay you said your dad's what uh he was i was he sanity checks my
ideas so he asked me what would Dave advise in this case.
That's neat that you guys have that kind of relationship.
Pretty cool.
Okay.
And so how much is the wedding going to be?
So the wedding's going to be $80,000.
This is everything, dresses, venue, housing.
And then we're getting family support for $30,000.
So out of our pocket, it's $50,000.
And what do you guys make?
Combined, it's roughly $340,000 a year.
Okay.
All right.
And you have the cash?
We have the cash.
We don't own a home yet, so this decision delays buying a home.
Mm-hmm.
And you both looked at each other and said that out loud?
Yes.
And that's a tradeoff you're both willing to make?
Yes.
Okay.
I look at these things in ratios.
To start with, when I hear an $80,000 wedding,
the first thing I do is pass out and I have to wake up.
But,
um,
but after that,
then I say,
okay,
you know,
I'm really happy to hear your numbers are as good as they are.
So the average wedding in America today is $34,000 annually.
I mean,
$34,000 and the average household income is about double that. And so
if we say the average person in America spends half of their annual income on a wedding when
they get married, then you're not spending that. You're not spending half your annual income,
right? So, but it probably would change. Like if the average person spends 10% of their,
I'll just make up a number
10 percent of their income on food uh when you make a half million you don't really want to spend
10 percent of your income on food because you'll be big as a house right and so that wouldn't work
so somewhere these ratios start to break down but like now possibly but but you can afford to do this. You're paying cash to do this. It is not an unreasonable ratio as a percentage of your income.
And then you're willing to look at each other and say,
we're willing to spend on this one day and delay our house.
That doesn't sound right when you say that out
loud, but it's not the end of the world. If you want to do it, you can afford it.
So how long would it delay? Because you do have a good income. I'm imagining there's
maybe some money saved in addition to this. So how far does it set you back?
So I don't have a great answer on how far it sets us back.
We're not in the immediate house hunting stage.
Step one is to get married.
Of course.
So it's unclear to me exactly how much it sets us back.
I would guess it's setting us back by four months to six months.
That's nothing.
No, it's more than that.
But how old are you two?
I'm 30.
She's 29. Okay. But how old are you two? I'm 30. She's 29.
Okay.
You're living in Los Angeles.
So, and by the way, when I asked that question, yeah, I would say before, you know, I would not buy a house in the first year of marriage anyway.
So I wasn't intending to rush you.
I just wanted to know, you know, what your sights are set on as far as that's concerned.
This is doable.
It's not insane the fact that it causes
you to gulp a little bit makes you want to stop and go okay what is what's what's my motivator
why is it that i can do this like i've got a friend that makes 10 million a year uh his daughter got
married they spent 100 grand on the wedding whoopee okay no big deal right um but it's still shocking to those of us you know
that are like regular people and so um and that's kind of what your situation is you you're you know
you're spending a shocking amount of money on a wedding um but it's not it's not mathematically
insane does that make sense?
Does this include the honeymoon trip as well?
The trip?
It does not include the honeymoon with points from credit cards,
which we should get rid of.
I don't think we'll end up paying much for it.
I revealed the skeletons in the closet.
Sorry about that.
The truth serum came out.
Yeah, I think if I were you two, I would just want to look at each other and say,
why we are spending three times the national average on our wedding.
Why?
And if you can answer that question looking at each other
and not say uh because i'm an immature princess and i just want it and i'm going to stomp my foot
and have a red face which i don't i'm not accusing you of then if you can answer that question
logically and go hey it's something i've always wanted to do we like a big party with family and
friends which is actually what my friend said that spent a bunch of money on his kid's wedding he's like our family likes to party we like to
celebrate big milestones this is a fun thing and uh that's why i work and i've got the money shut
up and um you know that's great it's a valid answer it wasn't it wasn't coming from some kind
of entitlement or weird stuff or something you know so as long as you got all that stuff covered
i your your math is not insane it's more it's three times what most people do but you make
more than three times what most people do so you can afford to do it that's the idea that's the
that's the answer and joe jade you know that's a a good segue almost into a lot of answers to
questions you know it's uh sometimes in the
neighborhood i grew up in people would say stuff like no one needs a car that nice you ever heard
people say stuff like that of course no one should ever dot dot dot you ever heard people
they usually say with that country accent but it's like you know but nobody oughta nobody
oughta no christian oughta every i mean everyone knows that the accord is the christian car because
jesus said they're all in one accord so my lord you know it's um anything older anything better
than a 1993 accord is not christian we know that nobody ought to spend that they're starving
children in the world that is called haterade that's exactly
it's bitterness and it's envy and so i had to kind of work through that once i started knowing
wealthy people who were good people and they had nice stuff and i'm like okay like a buddy another
buddy of mine made 17 million and he drove up in a 480 000 lamborghini i need to be friends with these people like
sweet you know and uh but if you do the ratios i mean so take a zero off it's 107 or 1.7 million
and you buy a 48 000 car or take another zero off you make 170 000 and you bought a 48 a 4800 car it's nothing it's the same ratio
so of course you should buy that car it's nothing it's like you and me buying a biscuit
this is the ramsey show
jade washaw ramsey personality is my co-host today thank you for joining us america we're so glad
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Ed's with us in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Hi, Ed.
Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hi, Dave.
How you doing, sir?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Yeah, our church is growing, and we're being blessed.
And they're wanting to build a bigger sanctuary and
you know financial peace graduate there this sounded a little off to me but they
want to do one third in cash one third and pledge and one third and loan which
will really work out to be two thirds long until the pledges come in initially. So using debt to grow a church is the question.
Okay.
Well, to start with, let's be very clear that this is not a salvation issue
or an issue of blasphemous or something like that, okay?
Right.
I've got friends all through the church world that borrow money in their churches and they're still friends of mine.
They know I don't agree with them, but they're still friends of mine.
Just like I have friends that borrow money to buy a car.
They're still friends of mine.
OK, so it's not it's not that kind of a thing.
But my my question are my I would want to make two major points in this, three. Number one, I don't think
you're going to stop them. I don't think I'm going to stop them because I don't think they care what
we think, okay? So they're probably going to do this. It's probably not going to stop. But
conceptually, or if we wanted to discuss it as if we could discuss it, first thing I would say is
I can find, and I've studied it for 40 years, I can find nowhere in Scripture that there's one single positive reference to debt.
Every time the Bible mentions debt, it is a negative connotation.
Again, it's not blasphemy.
It is not a sin.
It is not at that level.
But the borrower is slave to the lender.
There's a lot of mentions of fool around the word debt.
And it's a curse.
When Moses is not able to take the children of Israel into the promised land,
Joshua instead does. God says, you know, here are the blessings and here are the curses.
And the blessings, if God is blessing you, you will be a lender to other nations,
a giver to other nations. If not, you'll be a borrower. It's one of the curses.
And so it's a curse. And it's all those kinds of negative
things mentioned because you're doing something you don't have the money to do. It's pretty simple.
The other thing then is how does that play out when we escape the scriptural or when we sidestep
the scriptural discussion of this? Because you really can't find it in there. Larry Burkett
used to say there's no place in Deuteronomy where the Israelites were
hemmed in the valley by the Amalekites, and the Amalekites are getting ready to kill them,
so they did a bond issue, and they beat their way out with pledges. It's just not in the Bible
anywhere. God has never, in his word, he has never used debt to cause his kingdom to expand.
It's never once in there. as if your church is the only place
that someone can meet jesus and if we don't build this sanctuary they're going to go to hell
that's absolute arrogance okay absolute arrogance it's not in the scripture now aside from that
the other problem you get is that um well before i I leave that, Larry Burkett also used to say,
and I've experienced this personally, that what happens is a lot of the men, sometimes
the women, in the church that are successful in business are appointed to the elder board,
the deacon board. And so it's not unusual for your governing body inside of a church
to look like the Chamber of Commerce.
It's a banker, a car dealer, an insurance agent, whatever.
And so they then start to run the business of the church
the way they run their business in the world.
Rather than using Scripture to make the decisions, they use their MBA to make the decisions.
And that's a theological breakdown right there, a doctrinal breakdown.
You shouldn't run a church the way you run a business.
There ought to be some overlay.
There ought to be some leadership skills, that kind of stuff that there is an overlay on.
But operationally and the financial principles are not the same because it's a different calling.
So now back to the other.
So that's all under the heading of it's simply not scriptural.
You can't find it in the Bible.
Now, the second thing is, how does that play out in the real world?
Well, 50,000 churches in America have now taught Financial Peace University.
So you might guess that I've had this discussion before.
You might even further guess that we've got an amazing amount of data of what happens.
The amount of times that a pastor is no longer the pastor 36 months after the building project and capital campaign it's like
85 percent wow 85 percent of the time the pastor has gone within three years after a major capital
campaign and building campaign for one reason or another and it we can't necessarily tie it
exactly to that but they just just, it puts a strain.
What you're doing is you're putting an entire strain on the entire organism called your church.
And part of that is the head of the church or the leader of the church, the pastor.
And it's a big deal.
Where I've, on the other hand, have had the wonderful experience of being around churches where they went the other way. The church I attend merged with a local church and took on at that time $7.5 million worth
of debt that the church they merged with already had.
And our pastor said, we're going to pay it off in 14 months.
And they did.
Raised money to do that instead of building buildings.
And they're doing a $40 million project right now,
and they raised 100% of the capital, zero debt.
Not going to go back in debt.
Not because I go there, but I might go there because of that, hello,
and might have something to do with it.
So take it a step further.
So this is Ed's church.
So if the church goes ahead and does this, a third pledge, a third cash,
a third loan, if you're attending that church and you're listening and you go, man, I agree with what Dave said.
Do you participate as a person who's attending the church?
Do you say, yeah, I'll pledge, I'll pray about it and I'll do whatever God lays on my heart?
Or are you, Dave, are you like, I'm not contributing to that?
Well, there's two types of giving that we do, tithes and offerings.
Tithe is a tenth of your income going to your local church.
That's not a negotiable for me.
Right.
If I have to not tithe because I don't believe in the church,
it's time for me to leave the church.
I got to go to a different one.
Okay.
And I would not leave a church over this.
No, I wouldn't either.
I wouldn't either.
But usually these pledges are obviously above and beyond.
But I'm not going to donate to the campaign if it involves debt
because I'm not going to give the money that God gave me to manage
so they can give it to a stinking bank.
Okay.
There you go.
Because stinking banks are just that.
They're stinking banks.
Oh, Dave, I love when you just drive a hard line in the sand.
It's just, you know.
And that's why the Ramsey Family Foundation doesn't donate
to ministries that run debt.
I didn't know that. That's great. That's one of our
things that Denise has to look at
when we're going there. Do y'all run debt?
We can't give to you because you're
giving God's money to a stinking bank.
Wow. Can't stand stinking banks.
This is the Ramsey Show.
Thanks for joining us, America.
Jay is with us in New York City.
Hi, Jay.
How are you?
I am good.
How are you doing, Dave and Jade?
Better than we deserve.
What's up?
So I'm calling regarding I started, I read your books early on in my career and I started following the steps and then got married.
Just did not make a, me and my ex spouse did not kind of align on our same financial values, but just kind of moving forward to today.
I'm 40 years old.
I'm divorced, uh, mostly due to financial reasons,
just different alignment. But right now I'm in a situation of rebuilding my life back. And I
started going back through all the baby steps and I skipped step one because I already had more than
a thousand dollars. And I started focusing on step two., and I started focusing on step two and then I started
jumping between step two and step three. Um, because I was trying to build a, uh, six month
sort of like emergency fund in case I lose my job. I work in tech, I'm a product designer
and the industry for the past few years has been sort of volatile,
where it's like six months I don't have a job, and then I have a job,
and that fear of not having a job, I still have to pay more.
You're in tech, and you went six months without a job?
Yeah, it happens.
Not really.
I have friends right now.
I mean, kind of. You can't find tech people, man.
I got six jobs on the board right now trying to hire people.
Uh, it's kind of depends on what, uh, whatever you're trying to do.
I have friends right now currently that are from Google and Microsoft that are still unemployed
and it's been eight months.
So it happens, you know, the market's kind of flooded.
So anyway, you're skipping between.
So you're making up your own plan.
How can we help?
All right.
So I'm not making up my own plan.
Yeah, you are.
You're not following ours.
You're doing yours.
It's okay.
How can we help you?
I'm just jumping between.
No, you're jumping between.
The concept of a baby step is you don't move to one till you get to the other one and you start with a thousand dollars and
anything over a thousand dollars that you have you put on the on baby step two and you pay off
your debt smallest to largest that's the concept but if you're not going to do that it's okay you
can do whatever you want to do how can we help you uh so i got that anxiety and i built out the fund
and then now i've been focused on step two fully. I paid off
my car. I paid off all my credit cards. I have no debt. You're 100% debt free now.
Outside of my mortgage and my student loan. Okay. So now you're on baby step three.
I'm not 100% out of debt because I'm still paying my student loan, which is $70,000.
So that was my last full focus, right?
So I was like, that's what I'm going to focus on.
Okay, Jay, how can we help you?
But I just need my consumer debt.
Well, that is consumer debt, honey.
But anyway, how can we help?
So my mom went into debt in her credit cards,
and I started helping to pay her credit cards.
I take care of my mom and dad.
They live with me.
Because they're ill?
They are ill.
My mom recently just had four strokes in three months.
Oh my goodness.
Not well.
Okay.
And they don't have any money.
They don't have any money.
They only have social security, which is $600 per person.
So I'm kind of, and then she spends money. I cut up her credit cards.
She only has one that I'm aware of that I just go, okay, if there's anything you need, just as long as I can watch it.
Just cut that one up too.
That shit, probably.
What does she need?
She buys weird things on Amazon, and Amazon has that one-click buy thing,
and it's just like random things show up to my house.
My point is she doesn't need anything.
How old is your mom, hon?
My mom is 76 and my dad
is 84. Okay, I'm going to
sit down with them tonight and I'm going to say, Mom and Dad, I love
you and I'm here for you and I'm going to take
care of you under
this condition.
You're going to assign the Social Security
checks to me in return for rent
and I'm going to feed you and give you a place to
live and you're not going to use any debt
at all, ever. You're not going to make a mess here because those people aren't going to feed you and give you a place to live, and you're not going to use any debt at all, ever.
You're not going to make a mess here.
Because those people aren't going to get paid.
When she's borrowing money, she doesn't have the money to pay them.
She's stealing.
Because she doesn't have the money to pay them.
It gets more complicated.
Okay, how could it possibly be more?
So I started paying $1,500 a month to knock out her credit cards quickly.
Why?
$20,000 worth of debt.
Don't pay them.
Don't pay them.
Well, she went ahead and reached out to my older brother going,
I feel bad causing your little brother so much burden.
Can we just consolidate this into a lower payment?
And they worked out something, and he got a Citibank loan. But his agreement with
my mom was that he, me, will pay the minimum payment, which is $500. That has nothing to do
with you. A, that has nothing to do with you. The brother got involved. Now he's created his own mess
that is between him and your mom. Here's the thing. Your parents are getting up there in age.
They have zero assets whatsoever if i would
take the credit card so she cannot spend on it anymore but what debt is left there when the time
comes and and she goes and leaves this earth there's nothing there that that debt is not going
to fall to you because there's nothing to follow his brother because his brother went now money
yeah and again that's why i said that's not your problem. Well, now it's for my brother's name. Right, but that's not your problem.
It's your brother's problem.
But it's because of family politics
and I just don't...
And then this is another thing
with politics
and then something watching your show.
It's don't borrow money from family.
I would have never agreed
to this setup
because now I have a son
and I've had child support
and anytime I try to do an activity
with my son... You're not liable for this. Why are you doing... Good Lord, son. You're adding yourself to this situation up because now I have a son and I've had child support and anytime I try to do an activity with
my son you're not liable for that. You're adding yourself to the situation and you don't have to
add yourself by the by the goodness of your heart you said mom dad you can come live with me I agree
with Dave that you take the social security checks cut up the credit cards and these are the
stipulations in which you can live with me and I'm happy to take care of you period. If you want to
use the social Security money each month
to send it over to your brother to pay that bill, that's fine.
That's your prerogative.
But don't let him run up any more money, honey,
because every time your mother borrows money, she's stealing
because those people are never going to get their money.
Because she's broke and she's ill health
and she's approaching 80 years old.
And when she dies, they get nothing.
So when she's borrowing money and they're going to get
it back that's stealing because you and i know they're never going to get their money and i'm
not going to participate in her doing that that's wrong it's morally wrong and you're not liable for
any of this so what you need to do is get your freaking act together including paying off this
ridiculous student loan and use your emergency fund to do that, and get yourself on a budget,
and set your parents' issues over to the side.
You are not responsible.
If you want to take them on and feed them and clothe them and house them, that's fine.
You've got $1,200 a month to your budget to do that,
minus whatever you decide to send your brother for the stupid mess he made.
But you guys have got to quit running this stuff in circles.
You're taking each other down.
You're all going to go to the bottom of the ocean and drown together
if you keep this up.
You're just creating this whirlwind.
I mean, this funnel, and it's just going around.
You're going right down the toilet together, riding around, going,
whoopee, look at you, look at you, you're stupid.
Everybody pointing across the toilet at the other one
as they go down the drain. Gra yeah and it's like you did it
no you did it no you did it no you did it and and it's like jeez and i would have never agreed to
that and all this crap just say no we're not doing this calm everything down all and quit
putting your money in the middle of this stuff. Yeah, because he mentioned he has child support.
You got to take care of that baby and you got to get yourself straightened out.
And you're very generous to offer to take care of them.
But it doesn't sound like you're really doing it out of the goodness of your heart.
It sounds like you all have a ridiculously toxic family and you got pulled into it for
that reason.
So you guys need to relook that whole situation, set some fresh boundaries,
get some help with the relational aspects of this,
and you need to really draw some lines, man.
But definitely do not use your money for this.
Definitely.
You didn't cause the mess, and you got a big enough mess of your own.
This is The ramsey show jade walsh all ramsey personality is my co-host today i'm dave ramsey your host jade when
rachel cruz was a brand new baby can you imagine that little rachel cruz. Her older sister was two and a half, barely walking, good.
We put these wonderful little angels to bed, and their mother and I were watching a perfectly
good TV show.
We glanced up the top of the stairs. The toddler is standing at the top of the stairs with the brand new baby in her arms,
bringing her down the stairs to us.
Because as you might imagine, Rachel Cruz was making noise.
And Rachel Ramsey at that time.
And yeah, I did the same thing you're doing right now.
For those of you looking deeply into the radio, Jade is gasping and holding her.
Clutching my pearls.
Clutching her pearls that this is not going to go well.
Because we all know that the weak can't help the weak.
Adults should carry children down the stairs, not toddlers. Broke people can't fix
financial problems for broke people. Y'all get the metaphor yet out there hello look deeply into your podcast and get this when you're broke
and dysfunctional taking on the rest of your broke and dysfunctional family
is not going to make you less broke and dysfunctional it's going to make you more
broke and more dysfunctional so if you're i i'm not ever i have been broke and dysfunctional and at the same time
and separately at times so i know what this looks like i'm not above that and everybody gets a
different starting place some people get a better start out of the gate than other people 100 you
know jade was saying you know at the break you
know thank god i my mind allows me to make decisions and i can see things clearly and not
everybody gets that starting point that's right you know but it doesn't matter where you start
you can choose from today forward to make different decisions.
Because you know down inside of you, you can feel it when your stomach tightens up and those muscles across the back of your shoulders tighten up
that you're getting ready to do something stupid.
And then later on when it turns out to be stupid, you know when you look back,
I've done this and all of you have done it, you know when you back and you go you know when i was doing that i was thinking this is
stupid but i went ahead and did it anyway how many of you can everybody testify amen right i mean
everybody right everybody's done this so the trick is to stop that pattern because the proverb says a wise man sees danger and stops a fool goes forward and suffers
for it so i get that right if i come out of a background a family if you come out of a background
or a family or you come out of an area of the country or a socioeconomic way of thinking,
whatever it is you're coming from,
you have the right to put the negative parts of that in your rearview mirror.
You have the right to say, I'm not going to think that way anymore.
I'm going to do this other thing this way.
And that may mean that some of the people
around me are not going to understand when I make different decisions because I remember one of the
famous things that you say and it's it's because it grabs me around the throat every time you talk
about it is and you talk about this in your book um that that around your family they had a saying
and you had to say okay I'm not going to have that saying.
Yeah.
Talk about that.
We ain't got no money.
That was the phrase.
That was the phrase that was the reason that we couldn't go forward.
We ain't got no money.
We ain't got no money.
It was the answer to everything.
The answer to everything in all the various forms.
I ain't got no money for that.
I ain't going to do that.
And it was just the constant kind of stop stop the door slamming in your face and I think that to your point Dave no matter
where you come from those things they get inside of you and they feel like they're part of you
until you rip them out and that is painful and you say things like people like us yeah ain't got
no money yeah people like us that's the way they do it I don't know
what people like us but if there is a people like you whoever you are listening right yeah and you
can you can you can say okay people people that come you know people that are come out of this
type of the situation this is yeah and it's like a buddy of mine said he grew up in the hood and he
said you know getting out of the hood is easier than getting the hood out of you 100 that's what
I'm saying it gets in you and you you have to do the very hard work of separating yourself from that
previous identity, you know, because I used to look and see people.
And it's not looking down on someone.
No.
It's just saying that crap don't work.
Well, it's like you said, it's a different starting point.
Some people came into the world and, you know, if you were a second generation Ramsey person,
your parents taught you sense with money and taught you a sense of.
Rachel had a better starting line than I did.
That's right.
And I had a better starting line than my dad.
That's right.
And so on, you know.
And so that's one thing you want to give your kids is a better starting line.
But it's not just math.
No.
It's the ability to make decisions, the wisdom, the ability to look at something and think differently, the ability to think in abundance rather than scarcity.
And really just to be able to take that moment, like you said, where something occurs and
you take the moment to reflect on that and go, you know what?
Like you said, I felt that that wasn't right or I felt that something about that didn't
feel right.
And when you take the moment to reflect, then you can go, okay, next time a thought like that pops up,
I can kind of grab it before it makes me go in the wrong direction again.
John Maxwell uses this example.
He tells the story in terms of a leadership story,
but it also applies to this discussion.
Years ago, before laws were the way they were now,
these researchers in a psychology department put a group of chimpanzees in a room,
a big pole in the middle of the room with some bananas at the top of the pole.
If a chimpanzee would climb up the pole to get the bananas,
they would take a water cannon, a fire hose, and shoot him, knock him off of there.
Every time a chimpanzee would try to climb the pole to get the bananas, they would take a water cannon, a fire hose, and shoot him, knock him off of there. Every time a chimpanzee would try to climb the pole to get the bananas, boom, they'd
knock him off.
Different ones would look around.
They'd talk about it.
They'd huddle.
They'd make all these decisions.
And finally, a brave one would go up again.
Boom, gets knocked off.
Boom, gets knocked off.
Boom, gets knocked off.
So any, and then pretty soon, they didn't have to shoot the water cannon.
If one tried to go up, the others would pull it down.
Because they said, we know what's going to happen to you if you try.
And then they changed the chimpanzees out a little bit at a time
to where after a while they had changed enough of them out
that none of them in the room had the memory,
the communal memory of the water cannon knocking them off the pole.
They didn't know why you weren't allowed to climb but it was just people like us don't climb and so if someone tried to climb
the other chimpanzees would pull them down and they didn't even know why
it had been ingrained into the community and so that's how that's how this stuff can work in such
a negative way and a family can do that A family system that's broken can do that.
They'll pull you back down.
It's embedded.
And they don't even know why.
Don't even know why.
Oh, Dave, that's so good.
That's so true.
It's so, so true.
And, you know, in the South, people will say stuff like, you're getting above your raisin.
You ever heard that one?
No, that's different.
I've not heard that.
That's different. That's different.
That's different.
That just means you think you're too good.
Yeah, you think you're too good.
You think you're too good.
You're getting above your raisin.
It has nothing to do with raisins in a box.
It's like the way you were brought up, the way you were raised.
And so you're getting above your raisin.
And so, yeah, that means you think you're haughty or you're something else.
Oh, yeah.
And after a while, when I heard somebody say something like that, I thought, yeah, that means you think you're haughty or you're something else. Oh, yeah. And it's like, and I always, and after a while, when I heard somebody say something like that,
I thought, yeah, absolutely.
I'm glad you feel that way.
That is absolutely the freaking goal.
That's exactly what I want to do.
And by the way, it's what I'd like for my kids to do.
And I'd like for my grandkids to do better than, yeah, absolutely.
Every one of you ought to get above your raisin.
I know.
That's right.
Wow.
Everybody.
Because these toxic systems in a community that are based on scarcity and fear and lies
and mythology, and the community could be your family, the community could be the area
of the country, the type of folk you were raised with, whatever, they'll tell you to
fail. And we just spent the last seven minutes telling you, eight type of folk you were raised with, whatever, they'll tell you to fail.
And we just spent the last seven minutes telling you,
eight minutes, that you don't have to fail.
I don't know where you start from, but I do know where you're going.
Not everybody's got the same starting line,
but they all got the same finish line.
Get after it, boys and girls.
Get it.
Get you some.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions,
it's the Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth,
do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
Jade Walsh, our Ramsey personality, is my co-host today.
Thank you for joining us. We're glad you're here.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Jesse is in Phoenix.
Hi, Jesse.
How are you?
All right.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Hey, man.
I just called in.
So recently I just got out of prison.
I have no debt. I have no kids. So I'm just trying to find out, um, where I can direct my life to a better, to a better path. Good for you.
How long were you in prison for? Uh, two years. What'd you do um instead of being a businessman and in other things i became a
businessman in there and started uh selling drugs um i got i got caught with like a legal enterprise
just a bunch of stuff that i should have never uh should have never done in the first place
okay cool so you had an entrepreneurial spirit and used it in the first place. Okay, cool.
So you had an entrepreneurial spirit and used it in the wrong place.
In the wrong place, yes.
Well, that's good news because you're right. You can use those same set of skills in a legal, not an illegal enterprise,
and probably prosper.
How old are you?
I'm 24.
Okay, good for you. Cool cool so are you working at all
they now I'm working as a tow truck driver but this is like my first real
job so I I do like it but it's not the same money where I was making, but it gives me the courage or the ambition to chase it.
I'm making $30,000 a year.
And is that, what's your living situation?
I have to go back with my mom.
And I'm happy to God I still have her.
Or else I, I don't know what else I would have done.
Okay.
All right.
How long have you been out?
When did you get out?
I've been out for six months.
Okay, good.
Good.
So far, you've got a place to live, and you've got some money coming in,
and you have a job that's legal.
That's good.
That's a really good start.
That's a good start.
And, like you said, while you're doing this you start to think about
what's the next step what's the next step what's the next step and by the way you're probably going
to be thinking that for the rest of your life we all do what's the next step what's the next thing
what you got next for me god where are we going from here and so um who you running around with these days
i have no friends okay uh other than friends i say i mean like i have zero like two friends
yeah like i'm just i just have my girlfriend i've've been moving together for eight years.
Wow.
I mean... I mean, you're starting fresh because you know better than to go hanging around with the folks you were hanging around before.
So you're starting fresh.
100%.
Listen, I love that.
To Dave's point, you've got a place to live.
You've got a job that's paying you something.
I like the fact that you're going, okay, I'm not going to be a've got a a job that's paying you something i like
the fact that you're going okay i'm not going to be a tow truck driver forever what's the next step
what are you interested in that's the thing i don't know um i sit down and i really think about
it i don't know i really don't have family that has prospered in life,
like as in a business, anything like that.
Honestly, I'm like the first person that graduated from high school.
And I have two sisters and three brothers.
So, I mean, I'm just the only one that really did. I have two sisters and three brothers.
So, I mean, I'm just the only one that really did.
So you're looking for a mentor.
You need somebody that you can look to.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Tell you what, I'm going to hook you up with a friend of mine.
I'm going to hook you up with a friend of mine that's a pastor there.
His name's Cal, and he's a pastor of a big church there in phoenix and i'm gonna hook you up with him and he's gonna get some guys around you because here's what i know jesse and you already
know this too you become who you hang around with and so you've got to be very selective about who
you put around you particularly at this time in your life. And so plugging you into a good church community with some good men
who can show you a direction to go and some next steps.
I don't think we can do everything you need to do in one radio call.
You've got a lot of things.
You've got a lot of potential.
A lot of wonderful things can happen in your future,
and I don't think we're going to be able to line up everything for you to do in one call.
That's right.
But the next thing is get some community around you.
And then I want you to continue to do what Jay just challenged you to do,
and that's think about, all right, what is something that I see out there?
What's a problem that people in Phoenix have that I can help them with their problem?
Because as an entrepreneur, Jesse, I'll tell you,
when you help someone with their problem, they give you money.
Okay?
I mean, if it's lawn care, you solve their problem.
If it's pressure washing, you solve their problem.
If it's fixing their car, you solve their problem.
In your case right now, the company you're working for is removing cars
from places they shouldn't be.
You solved a problem. Or taking someone's shouldn't be. You solved a problem.
Or taking someone's broken car somewhere.
You solved a problem.
So when you solve a problem as an entrepreneur, people pay you money for that.
And it's amazing what you can do to create income when you see something and you go, gosh, if I helped people with that problem, I could probably charge for that and they would let me do that.
And I want you to start thinking along those lines because I do think I wasn't joking around.
I think your entrepreneurial spirit that got you into trouble could also, when applied
right, be the biggest blessing that ever happened to you.
I agree.
100%.
Yeah.
So I'm going to hook you up with Cal
I'm going to put you on hold
and Christian is going to pick up our phone screener
and he's going to get your information
and we're going to get you hooked up with that community
and the other thing I want you to do
is I'm going to give you a code
to take Ken Coleman's
assessment
his career assessment
and it's going to be free to you because I'm going to pay for it,
test for you to start to say, okay, these are my strengths,
and that could maybe spark some ideas of some next things to do.
And then patiently saying, God, thank you for this tow truck job,
even though it doesn't pay much because at least I got one.
And then patiently
while being grateful for where you are start making the steps to be where to never be there again
and to move to a better place and then to a better place and then to a better place
don't jump don't don't try to get to moving too fast yeah there's no there's no easy money out
there it's all hard money I want you to get hooked up with BetterHelp too
because your life has changed greatly
over the past two and a half years
and that's a lot to work through.
You don't, you know, your family,
the way you interact with your family is different.
You said you didn't have any friends.
And so I think it would be good
not only to get plugged in with the church,
but really to be talking to somebody on a normal basis
about how to navigate this.
Yeah, that's a good plan.
It's a good plan. So hold on. We're going to take care of all that for you. We want to be part of
this next chapter of your life that's a good chapter, and we're going to help you solve a
problem. There you go. That's how this works. Hang on, Jesse. We'll take care of you. This is The Ramsey Show.
Jade Walshaw, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Thank you for joining us, America.
We're so glad you're here.
Today's question of the day comes from Rebecca in Wisconsin.
Yeah, she says, we paid off our home in 2021.
Since then, we've struggled financially and have not been able to budget for paying our annual property taxes.
Should we save up for this through the year and pay it in a lump sum?
Or should we try to save a certain amount to pay it quarterly?
Could we really lose our paid off home over unpaid property taxes?
Yikes.
Honestly, for me, this question, property taxes are the least of your concerns. I'd,
you guys have got some things going on financially that, um, this shouldn't be an issue. Uh, but yeah,
whatever you want to do, if you want to pay, you know, do a sinking fund, get, get into your every dollar budget and say, okay, what do I need to save up every single month? What do I need to
set aside every single month so that when these become due at the end of the year or whatever, the money is there. You could do that
using a sinking fund. If you wanted to pay them quarterly, if you have the money in your budget
that you want to do it quarterly, usually you get a little bit of a discount in some cases, right?
If you can pay them in a lump sum. But I read this, Dave, and I just don't think that i have more questions and answers yeah
how do you struggle financially when you don't have a house payment that means you don't have
a job means you're not working much yeah yeah so so something's got to give uh you got to go
create some income kiddo this is a symptom as as you would say dave yeah you got to go create some
income and then when you do that this this property taxes if you don't have a house payment and you're struggling financially,
there's something really going on. I mean, I guess it's possible that you went on some kind
of ridiculous spending spree and screwed it up, but it's most likely that this is an income problem.
Well, yeah. And the fact that she's projecting it out over the course of, you know, a year and a
quarter for me. Yeah yeah you could really lose your
home i mean if you don't pay your taxes they'll put a lien against every state in america they
will sell your house front paid property taxes every state so yeah yeah yes it's a real thing
yes it's very possible but here's the thing uh you know it's a glaring honking horn blaring whistle when you say i paid off my home and i'm struggling
financially everybody everybody listening to this right now is going oh what and and so it must be
income got it and so then so we know what we got to fix and it's not how you budget for property
taxes it's your problem your problem you've got an income problem.
And yes, then I would just set it up in your every dollar budget and pay it monthly.
Any of us that have paid for properties that pay our insurance on the properties, we pay
our taxes on the properties.
We set up a monthly withholding out of them, you know, out of our budget and it builds
up.
And then when it comes due, the money's sitting there in a sinking fund,
in a savings account, a labeled area in your every dollar budget.
And you'll have the money.
It's very easy to do.
And then you just pay it on time and annually, and you're back into it.
Same thing as Christmas, all right?
They don't move Christmas.
You know exactly how far it is to Christmas.
Right now, you can look it up in the
exact number of days. And you know, how much do you need for Christmas? It doesn't sneak up on
you. They don't move it. That's right. So if you're not ready for, how can we afford Christmas?
Well, you start thinking about it now. Yeah. And you start saying, okay, out of the income,
hello, that I'm creating, I set some aside. Walker's in Jacksonville, Florida. Hey,
Walker, welcome to the Ramsey Show. Hey, Dave, how are you? Better than I deserve. What's up?
Yeah, so the root of my issue is I took out a loan for $17,250 for a car that Kelly Blue Book says it's worth $6,500.
Why did you do that?
Well, the salesman was really convincing, obviously.
He's so convincing you paid three times what the car's worth?
That's just weird.
They kept all that under the table and didn't show me.
They actually told me that was the wholesale price,
and I'm like, that sounds kind of funny.
That doesn't even make sense, though. What kind of car is this?
It's a 2018 Ford EcoSport, a compact.
How old are you?
I'm 20.
So you walked in there by yourself,
and you had somehow enough sense to get to the dealership but while there did not realize
that an eighteen thousand dollar car is a six thousand dollar car that seems kind of weird
it's very weird did you do any research on this car on you know before you walked in like this
is what i want to get this is what they cost i uh i i walked in with my only criteria being four doors um
so did you have a phone with your mind uh did i have a phone with me now
wow um now they pulled up the uh they didn't have the car fax or anything like that so
what's even worse is this car is a lemon because like i bought it with 68 000 on it
and it already had an engine put in it and now it's in the shop long term for an issue that the
manufacturer hasn't even uh like ford hasn't released repair instructions for the mechanics
so they like i'm on a i'm on a long-term dealership loaner right now. Um, so my, my follow-up question is obviously I want to get rid of this car because I'm
going to have to throw a bunch of money in it if I keep it.
Um, so questions are, should I keep it in the, you know, and just hope and pray that
it's reliable enough that I can pay the loan down to where I won't have too bad negative equity,
because that's about, what is that, $8,000 in negative equity?
What do you make, Walker?
About $22,000 a year.
Working 40 hours.
Well, I'm active duty military, and I really don't work that much,
but $22,000 a year so I
have in the credit union I have about six when did you buy this car October
okay um what branch of the military are you in, son? Maybe. Okay.
I want you to go see your senior officer in your area and tell them about this car company screwing you.
And I want him to go with you over to the dealership and see if he can't help you work this out because this company is preying on young, stupid new enlistees,
and the senior officers don't take kindly to that.
And I want you to solicit some help from someone who knows how to talk to people who are crooks,
who take advantage of his men.
Okay. to people who are crooks who take advantage of his men okay so if someone sold you a car that is worth $6,000 for $18,000 and you're 20 years old and
you're newly enlisted Navy they were screwing someone who's serving our
country and your senior officer knows that they are preying on the guys just like you and he will help you
and he'll bring jag involved if he needs to or whoever else because these guys are crooks
right and um you need some help with someone that's got more life experience than you to walk
in there and really more muscle, honestly.
Not sure he can do anything legally, and I'm not suggesting he would physically threaten them,
although it's probably possible.
But I want you to get your senior officers involved and JAG involved,
and I want you to go physically over to the dealership,
and I would like for them to just write canceled through all of this and take care of it,
and you walk away clean.
That's what my goal would be.
It might be that you end up having to write a check
for $3,000 or $4,000, $5,000 to get away from this,
but I want you to get away from it
as far away from these people as you can get,
as fast as you can get, and then start fresh.
And next time you get ready to make a major purchase,
do your homework and have some people who are more experienced than you
about that major purchase in the room with you.
Okay.
Does that make sense?
Yes, sir, absolutely.
I'm not making fun of you, Walker.
You were an innocent lamb led to the slaughter,
and I'm not okay with that as a taxpayer who loves the military.
It pisses me off.
And so I want you to get some people in your branch there,
some of your senior officers and JAG involved,
and I want this stopped because this happens, folks,
if you don't know, outside military bases all over America every day.
They're stupid on both sides of the road just as soon as you leave the gate
and all up and down the street, and they will screw these guys and gals,
and they do.
It's awful.
I'm sorry, Welker.
You deserve better from your fellow countrymen.
This is The Ramsey Show.
The best way to make the most of your money is by telling it what to do instead of wondering where it went.
That's called a plan.
Living intentionally with your money.
The only way you win at anything is intentionally.
No one accidentally wins. And you have to tell your money. The only way you win at anything is intentionally. No one accidentally wins,
and you have to tell your money what to do. You need to give every dollar of your money an
assignment, a name, a mission every month. That's why we call the world's best budgeting app Every
Dollar. It makes it simple to plan your spending, to track expenses, to save what matters most. It's
an easy-to-use app, fits into your busy life.
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We'll show you how to do every bit of it, help you walk the baby steps,
help you do the sinking funds we talk about.
Everything's there.
Download EveryDollar for free in the App Store or at Google Play today.
EveryDollar.
Tens of millions of people are using this. Thank you you guys, by the way. It's a huge success. Are you doing another webinar soon? Not a webinar, but I will be doing a demo of
every dollar at our Total Money Makeover live weekend event. That's coming up May 10th and 11th.
Week from Friday and Saturday. Coming up fast. fast. You know, the thing, let me just say this,
about every dollar that I like, especially for couples,
is I feel like because it's on your phone,
it's on your mobile device, it can be on your desktop,
I feel like it bridges the gaps of communication
that sometimes you have with money
when it comes to your spouse.
Because you might forget to say, hey, I did this or that,
but because it's on everybody's phone,
it's kind of happening in real time. You can see, went to publics they spent you know 15 or oh he did
pay the mortgage you don't even need an iphone tracker you'll know where they were based on
their pattern of spending oh you went to the mall today okay what were you doing over there
i love every dollar so fun very good dan is with us in Cleveland, Ohio. Hi, Dan. Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hi, Dave and Jade. So I obviously have a problem, but I want to give you some background on our
financial situation that I think will be important context to the problem we're having. So I'm 33,
my wife is 32. Our combined household income is $375,000. We have $150,000 in my wife's 401k, $85,000 in mine. And the reason
there's less in mine is because I use the COVID forbearance to pay off $82,000 in student loans.
So I'm student debt free now after law school. We have about $210,000 in a money market account. We have $40,000 in a REIT. We owe $188,000 on our house, and it's appraised at $475,000.
We have $20,000 in our daughter's $529,000.
We have a 15-month-old daughter who's beautiful.
Sounds like you're doing good.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
But we also owe $20,000 to my wife's car.
The issue we're facing is we're outgrowing our house.
It's like an 1,800-square-foot house. It's 120 years old.
And we moved here because it was a young professional neighborhood.
We love the neighborhood.
But eventually we're going to want a bigger house for a bigger family with a yard
and things we want our daughter to have.
But the issue we have is, and it's a blessing in a lot of ways too, in about 18 months I'll be up for a partnership at my law firm.
And the buy-in is $250,000.
And so we're kind of at this crossroads where we want to figure out how and when do we upgrade a home?
Do we hang here as long as we can?
Because we want to be able to pay as much of the partnership cost up front as possible
because the options are the firm gives us a loan that we would then pay back
through essentially garnishments we pay with cash up front
or the percentage of the revenue we bring in through
billing or otherwise is taken away. So we want to make sure we can pay as much of the partnership
up front as we can. How long ago, you have $210,000 in a money market. Way to go, Dan.
Of the $375,000, how much is your income at the law firm?
$300,000. Okay. so when you become a partner, if you wrote a check for $250,000
and pay them, what will your income be instead of $300,000? How much will that increase your income?
A first-year partner is typically around $450,000. Okay, so you'd add $150,000 by writing a check for
$250,000. Correct, yeah. Sweet! That's great. That happened quick. I like it.
Now, how long ago did you have zero before,
and now you've added 210 to your money market?
I didn't make more than $15 an hour until I was 27.
You were 33.
How long ago did you have zero, and now you have 210?
Six years ago.
So it took you six years to save it? No no no no you didn't add the 210 and you added it in the last four years or three years
yeah and my wife came into this with savings too before we got married she was 50 or 75 i think
she had 75 okay so she's a great saver so you guys have saved 150 000 of the 210
i'm guessing in the last 24 months yeah 24 36 months that's what i'm guessing that's what i
was that's where i thought you were going to tell me okay all right so this is an easy one very easy
you mean you've got write a check and pay off your wife's car today
and get on a tight budget and make sure you have 250 000 in the money market account you've got. Write a check and pay off your wife's car today. And get on a tight budget and make sure you have $250,000 in the money market account.
You've got $40,000 in a REIT, so you've already got the money to do this today.
And it's 18 months away.
So set $250,000 aside in a money market to pay cash for the partnership.
And above that, start saving for the next house.
Yeah, which is not going to you got
18 months making 375 to save to move up in house so the year you become partner and your income
goes up 150 you're going to be able to move up in house with cash and write a check for cash to buy
out the partnership what am i missing yeah it's the timing of it like we went and saw a house oh there's the problem
quit looking at houses you're broke you got 200 hey man you don't want you don't buy a house
and not buy this partnership position no way no way suck it up buttercup yeah the houses will be
there no way the 250 here's that money's earmarked because $250,000 is going to pay you $150,000
more in one freaking year.
You're breakeven on this like 16 months.
Yeah.
This is like gold, man.
This is like printing money in your basement.
We want to make sure our daughter's...
She'll be good.
She's 15 months old. Your daughter has parents that make $400,000. Your daughter is going to make sure our daughters she's 15 your daughter has parents that make 400k
your daughter is going to make it this much space seriously she's inside not getting rained on and
being fed she's gonna be okay how old is your daughter 15 months oh god she doesn't even know that's why i said she takes
up this much room she's okay if she's got cheerios for god's sakes oh my gosh it's not
no no dude really you're fine don't don't use your don't blame this on your daughter you and
your wife went and got house fever y'all already have it picked out don't you yeah don't go to the freaking parade of homes man
it's it causes me every time we go to the parade of homes it causes me to buy a house it's awful
no don't don't go yeah you just you just listen i yeah you that your brain quit working for a
minute because you got house fever and so we're here to help you with that yeah just just delay it appreciate it hey you dan you have done so good you're you're you listen here's the thing you got
two big things on the plate house law firm okay partnership right partnerships done with the
math you gave me yeah so you write a check today pay off hers move some of that
reap money or don't move it but earmark the reap money and 210 that's your 250 you need
you don't need it for 18 more months it's going to sit in a high yield make some money between
now and then that money's spent pretend like you don't have that money now i make 375 headed towards 500 i want in 18 to 24 months based on that i'm going to
start saving to move up in the next 24 months into a better house and about the time you get
to become partner and your income goes up 150 you're going to be able to make the move
right but i'm not putting that partnership in jeopardy for a stinking house.
Nope, nope, nope, nope, nope, nope, nope, nope.
This is too sweet.
I also like that they'll be buying a house then based on the income that they actually
have versus a projected income.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, versus someday.
Yeah.
That's exciting.
Wow, what a great job you've done, Dan.
You guys are awesome.
Ringing the bell.
You go buy this house and then don't have the money to buy the partnership when the time comes?
That's a regert.
That'd be a bad one.
Yeah, that's a regret right there.
Right there.
That'd be bad news.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Our scripture of the day, Isaiah 32.8. Generous people plan to do what is generous, and they stand firm in their generosity.
I've never read that.
I know I've read that because I've read scripture, but I'll have to go back and look that one up.
Maya Angelou, I've learned that you shouldn't go through life with a catcher's mitt on both hands.
That's good.
You need to be able to throw something back.
Oh, that's good.
Chris is in Athens, Georgia.
Hi, Chris.
Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hi, how are you?
Better than I deserve.
How can I help?
I've listened to you for years and love your show thank you
my question is i'm 50 years old i've got
i think i owe about 40 40 000 on the house and about one year on the car, and I'll be debt-free.
And I have the opportunity to leave my job at 50 years old with 30 years and I have a little over 750 well a little over 700,000 in my 401k in my pension
and I'm just scared that I can't you you know, make it.
Okay.
What do you make a year?
I make about 60, and my wife makes about 45.
Okay.
And you can't touch your 401K to your 59 1⁄2 without penalty.
Will your pension pay out because you've been there so long and retire?
Will you start receiving on it? i can take a lump sum of like 245 000 uh on my pension and i've got about
483 in my 401k yeah which you can't touch until you're 59 1⁄2 and you said you're 50.
And if you take a lump sum on the pension
and you use it, you're going to pay penalty on it.
So we don't want to do that.
What will the pension pay out monthly
if you don't take the lump sum?
Well, my financial advisor,
there's a tax thing that you can use that will only put it down to 10%. He said that when I decided to leave, that the full amount of the 401K will go into IRAs and the pension,
which is a little over $740,000.
And I'm just scared if I'm doing the wrong thing. If it goes into IRAs and you take it out before you're 59 1⁄2,
you're going to be penalized and taxed.
There's not a tax thing that allows you to use it early.
I mean, you can do some minimum withdrawals, but they're so small,
you won't be able to eat on them.
So let me just move on then, okay?
Here's what I would do if I were in your shoes.
It sounds to me like you're ready to be done with this job, like past ready.
So you're only 50 years old.
What do you want to do with your life, dude?
You're not going to sit on the bank and fish.
No, I'm going to get another job. Okay, that's what I want to do with your life, dude? You're not going to sit on the bank and fish. No, I'm going to get another job.
Okay, that's what I want to do.
So what I would do is, yes, I would retire.
I would roll this money to an IRA, the 401K and the lump sum pension,
and let it continue to grow.
Don't touch it.
Don't worry about it.
And then you and your wife go make a living.
Yeah.
And you don't have to have the money because between your new income and her income, you wife go make a living. Yeah. And you don't have to have the money because between your new income
and her income, you all can make a living.
You're just fine.
You're millionaires.
You've done a great job.
Yeah.
My question is, you know, if I'm doing the right thing
because they froze our retirement.
Listen, what do you want to do what are you
going to do with your income i mean what are you going to what career are you going to go into when
you retire what's your new job uh just i'm making three or four hundred dollars a month why you know
uh you're worth a lot more than that. Why would you only do that?
My financial advisor, he told me that, you know, I can bring home more after I leave off of the earnings of my money.
No, you can't.
Okay. No, you can't. Okay?
You can't take $60,000 a year out of $750 without penalty and taxes at 50 years old.
There is a minimum withdrawal process, but the numbers are very, very small that you can get out of there.
I would not do that.
I want you to go make $60,000 or $100,000 a year in your new career.
Crap, you're only 50 years old.
Yeah.
Go make some money, dude, and leave this money alone and let it grow.
And you and your wife making $40,000 and you making $60,000 or $100,000,
y'all go have a great life and then just let that money.
Because here's what will happen.
If you leave that $750,000 alone instead of screwing with it and put it into good mutual funds
and let it every 10 you know if you put it in an average of 10 it'll double every seven years
so at 57 you're going to have a million and a half at 64 you're going to have three million
at 71 you're going to have six million if you keep your hands off of it and let it sit there and
grow and double and grow and double and the way you do that is you go have a life you don't sit
on your butt at 50 years old so yeah i would go get me a next career we call it an encore career
chris you take a bow after the first act the curtain comes up and there's a whole new segment to the play, the encore.
It's what they do, what the artist comes back out after the crowd is cheering so loud.
That's when they play what they really wanted to play.
Yeah, and that's when they play the songs they wanted to play.
That's exactly why we call it an encore career.
So you come back out and do what you've always wanted to do.
I don't care if you open a business.
I don't care what your new career is, but go make you some money and you and your wife leave this money alone. Yes, I would retire.
But under those circumstances, the other thing is it's not good for you at 50 years old
to plan to spend the next 40 years till you're 90 doing nothing.
That is not good mentally.
It's not good. It's not good spiritually. It's not good mentally. It's not good relationally.
You'll get fat. It's not good for you. not good mentally it's not good relationally you'll get fat it's not good for you your wife will get annoyed with you like go do something exactly
yeah go go figure out and you got the half your dadgum life left what are you gonna do with it
you're just middle-aged man go go do something big what is it you always wanted to do you got
this other thing in your in your rearview mirror, made yourself a millionaire.
Way to go.
Now leave this other money alone and go be somebody.
Go be somebody.
Go do something.
Dave, if you had to have an encore career, what would it be?
Me?
I'm just saying.
Well, here's the thing.
What's the other thing you would do?
You're going to be just like Rachel because Rachel plays these games when we're at Thanksgiving.
It's like, if you had a secret life life what would you do in your secret life and I'm like listen you know
what I do I do what I want to do so if I was going to do something different I would already be doing
it come on Dave like I gotta know I mean that's what I'm saying Rachel's like yeah that's just
no fun you're no fun at this game and I'm like if I wanted to be a secret agent I would have
already been a secret agent okay if I wanted to be a rodeo rider i would have already been a rodeo
rider i would have already gone and done it why do i have to wait until no go you don't want to
be a stuntman or i jumped out of an airplane the other day you did i mean it's like no i don't want
to be a stuntman they get all broke up i don't it hurts i don't like pain but no i mean it's like, no, I don't want to be a stuntman. They get all broke up. It hurts.
I don't like pain.
But no, I mean, if I don't like this, I would have already been doing something else and
y'all wouldn't have a job.
It's a game, Dave.
I know it's no fun.
It's not good for the game, but it's the truth.
So the point of the whole thing, though, is you do get to choose.
That's true.
You get to choose.
You get to choose.
You don't have to be one of those.
That's right.
You're not stuck.
Just stop doing that. Go do the other one. You know, it's like, wow, you ain't stuck. You get to choose. You don't have to be one of those. That's right. You're not stuck. Just stop doing that.
Go do the other one.
You know, it's like, wow, you ain't stuck.
It's pretty cool.
I love it.
It's no fun for the game, though.
I spoil all those dreamer games because I've been living the dream.
You've been living the dream all right.
Yeah.
If I wasn't me, I'd want to be me.
That's pretty freaking awesome, Dave.
That puts us out of the Ramsey Show and the books.
We'll be back with you before you know it.
In the meantime, remember, there's ultimately only one way to financial peace,
and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace, Christ Jesus. If you're a leader, your personal growth matters for your organization
because whatever you lead can only grow as much as you do.
I know from experience.
I've been CEO of Ramsey Solutions for over 30 years,
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