The Ramsey Show - This Is What It Means To Live Like No One Else!
Episode Date: March 26, 2024💵 Sign-up for EveryDollar today - The simplest way to budget for your life! Dave Ramsey & Dr. John Delony answer your questions and discuss: "My husband wants to buy his dream truck..." "Is Ramse...y hypocritical about mortgage debt?" "How do we stop living paycheck-to-paycheck?" "Is it okay to buy my mom a car?" "My in-laws trashed my rental, what should I do?" Support Our Sponsors: Churchill Mortgage Zander Insurance BetterHelp 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! ✂️ Share hope by leading an FPU class at your church! 📈 For help with investing, get connected with a SmartVestor Pro. ☂️ Protect yourself with the right coverage—take our coverage quiz! 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.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, number one best-selling book, author,
and host of a very hot YouTube slash podcast program on the Ramsey Networks
called The Dr. John Deloney Show.
He's my co-host today.
The phone number is 888-825-5225.
Sabrina starts off this hour in Tampa, Florida.
Hi, Sabrina.
How are you?
I'm doing better than I deserve as well.
I can't believe you finally get to settle this for my husband and I once and for all.
So I get to put on my referee's jersey, get out my whistle.
Marital referee, Dave.
Absolutely.
And you've been with us since our engagement because we did SPU as a part of our marriage counseling.
So we have every dollar.
We do the budget meetings.
We paid off our house last March.
So you guys already know the answer to this question, whatever it is.
That's the thing.
I think I do know the answer.
I know he knows the answer but he has
these external things so our network is 800 000 but my husband is ready to buy his dream
truck and i know you say wait until your network is at least a million dollars
we bring in about 215k a month or truck would be between 50 you mean a year so i'm you mean a year yeah
absolutely okay i was about to buy a truck okay okay yeah at 2 at 2.5 million annual income i'm
ready to go okay all right anyway but anyway 215 000 a year you're still doing good okay
yeah we already put in 15% for retirement.
And how much is the truck?
The truck will be $50,000 to $60,000.
Okay.
So what is it?
It's going to probably be a Silverado.
He's torn between the Silverado or, honestly, Dave, I feel so embarrassed.
What is the, oh, a Ford, a Ford, something.
F-150.
Repent, ma'am.
F-150.
F-150.
You can't call about the man's truck and not know what the man's truck is it's just wrong okay bless your heart this is wonderful okay so
the only art you're out of debt you have the money to pay cash for the truck the only argument is
800 versus a million right okay and so uh what's your home worth our home is worth a little over 300k it varies on
zillow between 300 330 okay and you're in tampa florida and you're adding 15 so you're adding
60 000 a year not counting growth to your 401ks and so that's 120 so in three years you'll be there if there's
no growth in the stock market so you're millionaires in 18 months from now roughly
that's crazy that's wild and exciting now that's what the math says okay that's good for y'all how
old are you i'm 35 and he's 37. You guys rock.
You're so smart.
You all rock.
You all got it here.
I didn't give you any money.
Yes, you did.
I just showed you how to do it.
Sabrina, what denomination are you guys?
Oh, we're Christians.
Oh, I know that.
I'm just trying to figure out.
You sound like you come from a very legalistic background and oh my god you know me so well i'm scared
all right she's a fundie dave will give you the answer and then i'll see if i can give you a
workaround because my church is all over the i'm just kidding go ahead dave um so the concept is
and the reason we put a million dollars on there,
is you need to have a really strong net worth and be in a really strong financial position
in order to be able to lose as much money as you're going to lose
when you drive a brand-new truck off the lot.
When the sound goes blump, blump, when you go into the street on a Ford F-150 that's $60,000
or a nice Silverado that's $65, 000 uh you just lost 15 000 bucks when it goes
boom boom golly that's what it costs when you drive it in the street so you got to be able to
absorb that blow and it not change your life at all most people do that crap while they're broke
middle class people and they i need a track i deserve a truck because i work hard you don't
deserve squat you don't work
hard enough and you haven't done a good job yet so that's who we're talking to we try to give put a
million dollars up there because at a million dollars net worth at 35 years old making 215
you can absorb a 15 000 blow right that's where the concept comes from so really what we need to
understand is the concept under the principle rather than the legalistic number because if it was 1.1 or 900 or 800 it doesn't really matter
what matters is the concept is you can absorb the blow so at if sharon and i were doing this
and it was me wanting a truck which is very very possible that that conversation has occurred
um because i drove my raptor here today so there you go but the uh we heard it coming like eight
blocks away god that's a good redneck truck man i'm just saying you gotta make an announcement
when you come around the corner but the uh uh all right so if if we were doing this we would
probably say all right the good news is the principle
that's in place made us stop and think, are we wise?
Okay.
So the good news is you're wise.
Both of you.
You've done a great job with your money.
You're incredible.
If you buy this truck, it's not going to destroy your life.
Okay.
And we set out on a journey following a set
of principles and guidelines that got us here deviating from those is kind of damaging to your
psyche it feels like you cheated you know what i'm saying yeah so technically league technically
financially you could buy the truck and you wouldn't notice. I worry more about you deviating from this and saying, okay, I got the cheat code, right?
I got the hack.
And so you could buy it today.
It wouldn't be a problem.
So what Sharon and I would do with both of those things in mind,
the concept matters more than anything else,
and the deviation scares me more than the technical math on it scares me.
And so what we would do is we would probably land in the middle.
We'd say, okay, we're not going to do it this year.
We're going to watch the stock market and what it does with our 401K.
We're going to watch our Zillow or whatever,
probably something more accurate than Zillow,
on my valuation of my real estate.
And, you know, if we get up in the 900s in the next 18 months, I'll buy a truck.
We might cheat in the middle.
You know, we'll probably meet in the middle.
It's probably what we would do.
Okay.
So this is not, but I can't, I don't get to blow my whistle because I'm not going to yell at you if you do it today.
And I'm not going to yell at you.
And I'm not going to say you're super extra smart if you do it, you know, if you wait till it's exactly a million, because there's nothing magic about the million.
What was magic is we made you pay attention.
What was magic is we gave you a plan that you believed in and you executed on it.
What was magic is you got a large enough net worth that you can absorb the blow.
That's the magic.
That makes sense.
And we didn't lose any of the magic if you buy something today.
And I Got it.
I absolutely love that plan.
And the one caveat I would add to it is, does it have to be a 2024?
Does a 2023 or 2022 get you there where somebody else, you get this amazing.
If you want to do a 23, you can do it today.
F-150.
Somebody else has already eaten that 15K for you.
And you buy a car with 9,000 miles on it.
Somebody returned it and you're good to go.
I will tell you this. I'm on my fourth Raptor.
So you're
going to do it again anyway. So you could do a
23 and in two years
go do a brand new one.
And that would solve... John, you're smart!
That's why we got you around here,
man. That's a better
solution than all my meandering around the barn six times.
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Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, best-selling author, and of course, host of the
Dr. John Deloney Show, which you need to tune in and check out on the Ramsey Networks. Zachary
is with us. He's in St. Louis. Hi, Zachary. How are you? I'm doing well. I'm doing well. How are
you guys doing? Better than we deserve, sir. What's up? Well, I had a question for you. I'm actually a pastor
over here at a small town church, and I just want to say I very much appreciate all that you do.
Thank you. But one question that's come up for me is I often hear you use the phrase,
the borrower is slave to the lender. And I definitely agree with that principle in many ways.
But then on the other end, I noticed that when it comes to a mortgage,
you are okay borrowing in that instance, which seems almost to betray that principle a little
bit. And I guess I was just curious on your reasoning as to why you think it's okay to
borrow in that instance. But then when it comes to something like a car,
especially for someone like me,
I live a little bit in the country where I'm at,
so it's a little bit more difficult.
A car is almost a requirement.
Pastor, that is a wonderful question.
Yeah.
It's a really good question.
Of course, you're quoting the Scriptures, Proverbs 22, 7,
the rituals over the poor and the borrower's slave to the lender. And this is a biblical principle
that we're violating when we say it's okay to take out a mortgage. And that's your point. And
you're correct completely on that. Or when we tell people it's okay to do that. So are you 26?
I'm actually like 31. So I had to think about that for a second okay
that's okay yeah you lose count around 30 it happens so yeah i'm on the 34th anniversary
of my 30th birthday but the uh um all right the uh uh so the answer to your question is it is the only hypocritical advice we give on this show. It's the only thing
that was hypocritical we give on this show. It's the only thing we tell people it's okay to do that
I never do. I went broke in my 20s as I was a baby Christian. I had just met God, and I discovered in
that process a guy teaching what the Bible said about money named Larry Burkett, and I discovered in that process a guy teaching what the Bible said
about money named Larry Burkett, and I said, I'm going to follow what the Bible says.
I'm never borrowing money again, and I've never borrowed money again.
I don't borrow money for anything ever for any reason under any circumstances.
Everything else I tell people on the show to do, I do exactly what I say to do.
Allowing people to take out a mortgage without me yelling at them,
it's the only time that my advice is inconsistent with my life.
Does that make sense?
Right.
And it's completely fair for you to call me out on it,
and then I'll answer your question.
But I wanted to caveat that and say I don't borrow money for anything.
And sometimes when I get a question where it's kind of borderline, whether they have to borrow or not, I tell them that story. I say,
hey, I don't borrow for anything. And I recommend that. That is the best way.
If you follow biblical principles, you're going to in your marriage, your marriage is going to
prosper. If you follow biblical principles, raising your kids, your kids are going to be
amazing. If you follow biblical principles in your mental health and your emotional state, you're going to prosper. And the same is true
in your money and in your leadership. If you're running a church, running a business, same thing's
true. So I evangelical, man, I believe if the Bible says it and you do it, it's a good thing,
right? So I'm with you on that. Now, the reason that I lighten up when someone calls in on that is two things. One is I can
pretty much talk you out of, or call you stupid taking out a car loan because cars go down in
value. The interest rate is higher and there's no correlation between buying cars with payments
and becoming wealthy. Very few millionaires will tell you that, Oh, the best thing I ever did was agree to
borrow on a car because I needed a car because I was out in the country and I was driving
a long way and I needed a car.
No millionaires told us that when we studied 10,000 of them.
So the fruit is not there.
I'm a fruit inspector.
Okay.
The second thing is millionaires do tell us that they borrowed to buy a house many times
and when they
got it paid off they never borrowed money again after that they're debt averse but not completely
mortgage averse so the the data is in that millionaires do do that even though i would tell
you the best way to do it is save up and pay cash for it it's hard to get people to save up for 10
years to buy a house i can get them to save up three years to buy a car or to 18 months to buy a car, but I can't, I've had trouble doing that. So I make
that violation, but I also often tell people all the time when I say that, uh, you know,
no more than a 15 year mortgage, no more than a payment of a fourth of your take-home pay.
You probably heard me say that Zachary and, and then get the stupid house paid off as fast as
you can, because the shortest distance between where you are and wealth is debt freedom.
And that's consistent across the thing.
But you're exactly right.
But cars are a completely different thing.
A car is the largest thing we buy that goes the wrong direction.
It goes down in value.
And when you finance a car, you're just begging to be middle class the rest of your life,
financially, mathematically.
Well, and most people are stupid enough to, like, take a car note on, like, a $30,000 car when they have no money either.
Exactly.
Yeah, like everybody listening right now just about.
Right, right, right.
You're right.
I did have one other thing, and by the way, I want to say I support everything you're doing wholeheartedly, including like I've been using myself many of these steps.
Being a small town pastor, you don't get paid a ton of money and you have kids. And so I've actually had to use these things for myself.
So, again, I want to say thank you. The one other thing I noticed, though, as someone who was new to the Dave Ramsey program in many ways and was new to those steps is that I didn't hear a lot of talk about creating a buffer.
So as someone who was new,
I didn't have any money in my checking account, right?
Because I was using credit cards and then I was paying off those credit cards
with the money in my account.
So I never really had money in my account and I was in this endless cycle,
obviously like a lot of people were. So one thing that I thought just to consider is that in those baby steps, I almost
thought there should be another baby step about creating a buffer because people need to, they
don't just need a $1,000 emergency fund. I thought that was the buffer whenever I was new to the Dave
Ramsey program and the Dave Ramsey baby steps.
But there's also this idea of making sure you have a buffer because you're going to have auto
payments on preschool and mortgages and all types of stuff. So that should be part of your budgeting,
Zachary. You should plan your, you should, it's budgeting is cashflow planning. And so you're
planning to not take more money out of your checking account than you have in it.
That's your buffer.
And you can put a $100 buffer in there if you want, but that's fine.
You don't need any more than that.
There's nothing wrong with that.
But you don't need a $2,000 buffer because you're incompetent at budgeting.
You need to have the budget dialed in.
We're paying the auto payment comes out here.
This other payment comes out here. This other payment comes out here.
The paycheck planning aspect, it's called, and if you use the EveryDollar app, shows you how to do
that. And so you need to plan out every situation there. But hey, we're honored to have you as a
new listener. That is something that, man, that rings home to me because here's what I fell in
the trap of doing. My wife and I would make a budget, and then we would check our checking account to see where we were.
We shouldn't do that because then I would make it – I'd be like, oh, I can get a little more groceries.
And then that –
Yeah, because the checking account is not an indicator if you're on your budget.
That's exactly right.
And so then that buffer he's talking about, then all of a sudden the school would pull their tuition on the fourth
instead of the fifth.
And because I was not following the budget map we'd laid out,
but I was checking the checking account part.
You would never, a budget map is a plan,
and you would never plan to spend money that you don't have in your account.
That's exactly right.
So don't plan to spend money you don't have in your account,
and your need for a buffer goes away.
Other than a common sense of 50 or 100 bucks or something for slippage you're a little you know something being off 20
cents or something you don't do that we don't want to to the penny thing but but this concept of
slosh right because that covers my lack of detail and sticking to the detail that that's not you
don't need slosh that's right that's not But, yeah, and a lot of people do that. So the trick is the thing that happens is your brain,
and you and I have been talking about this in a bunch of other areas too,
your brain, the neuroplasticity, your brain rewires itself
when you start making every single dollar come out when it's supposed to,
give every dollar of your income a name before the month begins.
You and your spouse spit, shake, and pinky swear that we're sticking to this contract that we just wrote down.
Something happens and changes from that chaotic wild man that you were before.
And it takes about 90 days for that rewiring to completely occur.
And that neuroplasticity, it changes your behavior.
It's a behavior transformation.
And so the detail matters in that situation because you're forcing your brain to work really hard.
Yeah, that's what you want.
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Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Thank you for joining us, America.
We're glad you're here.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Now, Dr. John, Ramsey Networks just broke a record last week.
Last week, the Dr. John Deloney show had 12 million views on YouTube in one week,
500,000 hours watched in one week,
and 40,000 new subscribers in a week.
That's a lot of human beings.
My mom retired, and I think she's just at home creating new accounts and hitting refresh refresh
40 000 of them she's got a lot of she's quick man she's quick she's quick on the keyboard yeah
no that's a wild i'm glad people are tuning in man yeah well you're helping a lot of people
pretty wild a lot of relationship questions and addiction questions and uh uh boundary questions
and marriage questions and some bizarre ones. That thing, I caught a
glimpse. I haven't heard the whole call yet. I've got to get it downloaded in the truck on the way
home. I listened to it. But, uh, the one that dropped with the woman who heard somebody gave
her, her husband gave her an ancestry.com DNA. Yeah. and she discovers that her dad is not her dad that it's the local
priest yeah is her dad yeah that is a hairy phone call it's tough and well and here's the deal um
some of those dr phil or something well it can feel jerry springer if you're not careful and i
think the the difference is um man we 23 and me if you go down and read some of the
articles it's happening all over the country people are finding out family secrets and family
stories that for generations before just lay quiet and people lose their faith because the pastor
does something or a minister does something or a leader does something and it's hard to come back
and so i think these sometimes the sensational calls feel like oh my jerry jerry jerry but
there's some humanity in
there with the hurt and pursing that says i thought that was my dad it's not yeah that's
and why didn't my dad why didn't my dad come get me uh because he didn't know well or maybe he did
know and yeah that's wow that makes it but i think all of us have that question like why didn't my
dad show up or why didn't my mom like so I think there's some humanity in all of those calls.
Yeah.
Oh, definitely.
That was just wild.
Yeah.
I thought, man, I didn't know if that – I knew it was going to take a twist, and then it went twisty-twisty.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was crazy.
Yeah.
So I guess that's why there's 12 million views last week.
Well, and the lesson is don't do genetic testing.
You never get good – I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding. I did it. Only bad things can come out. I did. You never get good. I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding.
I did it.
Only bad things can come out.
I did it.
It was good.
I will tell you this.
Find out your family tree forked.
Hey, Dave, you'll get a kick out of this.
My doctor, he ran the genetic test for me.
It wasn't 23 and me.
It was with his special program.
And he called and said, do you struggle walking past a bowl of candy in an office and i said did my wife
call you what happened and he's like i'm just looking at your genetics and whoa and i was like
yeah we should probably talk this doctor man he's got insight we should talk oh that wasn't a dna
test that was more than a dna test yeah cindy's in casper wyoming. Hi, Cindy. Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hello.
Thank you so much for both of you for what you do.
And I'm one of the Dr. John Deloney listeners, so thank you as well to you.
Thank you.
I'm excited and excited but nervous to talk to you guys today, but I have things kind of lined out, I hope.
Okay.
How can we help?
All right. So I unfortunately got a divorce about a year ago,
and I'm still in the house making the payment.
I'm wondering what I should do in the next six months after my daughter leaves for college
because I still owe my ex money from the house.
So I have some questions and some thoughts about that.
So the need to protect her by keeping the home goes away when she leaves correct
correct and that might have been some of the motivation early in this game
um how much do you owe the ex well the way the divorce decree is written is by 2026
i need to pay him half of the um appraised market value at the time I sell it,
but it's based on the amount owned on the house when we divorce. So I'm making all the payments
on the house when we divorce. So if you did it today, what do you owe him today?
If I were to do it today, depending on, I haven't actually got an appraisal,
but I'm going to guess between $75,000 and $100,000.
Okay. Do you have any money?
Which would be half. Nope, I'm on baby step three.
Good. Okay. And what's your household income?
My household income is about $70,000 off of my full-time job,
and then I also have side hustles that bring in between $5,000 and $10,000 a year.
And you're getting ready to be, in a matter of months, an empty-nester divorcee?
Correct.
Okay. All right.
Is there a reason to keep the house?
Before I started listening to you six months ago,
my reason would have been,
um,
the interest rate is really low because of course we refinance during that
time.
Um,
I do,
you know,
it's a great house.
I have great neighbors.
The location is 90% of the time.
Awesome.
Um,
and I,
I'm just comfortable here.
Like there's no re there's really no reason to leave except for the debt piece of it.
Okay.
Cause I, I think the question is that mathematically it doesn't sound like keeping it is going
to be a blessing.
It sounds like it's going to be real tight.
That is, yes.
That's part of what you refinance it.
Those payments on your income are going to be
tight agreed agreed so there's got to be a real reason to do this other than it's part of a
picture that is now shattered and cindy i'm going to ask you a question on your behalf
dave for every every payment she makes of a thousand bucks since he gets appraised value
minus sales price.
No, minus the old mortgage amount, the original mortgage amount.
Original mortgage amount. Yeah, he's not gaining ground while she's paying payments.
Okay, I thought he was gaining half of every payment.
He's only gaining the value increase, correct?
That's correct, yes.
Only gaining the value increase, yep.
Not the mortgage reduction, yeah.
So.
No, and the other thing I'm up against is I don't want to leave my community that I'm in.
And I've been looking at houses, kind of just keeping an eye out for what's out there.
And with the increase in the rates as well, I'm struggling to find something that's been with that 25% of my take home.
Well, Cindy, here's.
And something I'd want to move into.
Cindy, here's the hardest thing about divorce that they don't tell you it blows up every single corner of your life
right and it's almost impossible just to extract this relationship out of your life and keep your
community keep your geographical location keep your payments keep your neighbors it does happen sometimes
but they don't tell you that's fairly rare it blows up everything and what i see drown people
is them trying to keep parts of their life shackled to themselves and they drag this into
their future and it ends up collapsing them under a payment you can't afford or under you're going
to go buy a new house in the same neighborhood that's going to be way more expensive on a monthly basis, et cetera, et cetera.
It's just a matter of exhaling and realizing, oh, everything changed.
So, yeah, you got to digest that.
The way I – two decision-making tools I use in situations like this or other things is I look,
number one, I look into the future and I say,
what is the best decision for me 20 years from today?
How old are you?
I am 46.
Okay, so when you're 66,
what decision makes you really like the 46-year-old Cindy as being wise?
You know, what did you do?
You look back you're
god that was so smart or god that was so dumb I wish I hadn't done that you know and sometimes
if I look that far forward it kind of magnifies this and it becomes obvious all right the second
thing I do is I use a sunk cost analysis and you probably heard me do this you said you listen
and that is if I didn't already own it and I had the pile of money in the middle of the table would i come by this
house right okay and the probably the answer that one's no if you were in a one-bedroom apartment
right now and had that had that equity in your husband was gone your ex-husband's gone he's
paid off he's gone and you had your portion of the money in the middle of the kitchen table and you're in a
one-bedroom apartment, you probably wouldn't come buy this house. So you're defaulting backwards
into it. You know, you're lobstering into it. You're running backwards into it rather than
making a proper forward-based decision. I don't think it's the end of the world if you keep it,
but I think it's going to be tight and I'm not sure it's worth it is what I'm saying.
This is The Ramsey Show.
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This is the season for Halloween.
It's October.
We're wearing costumes, and we're wearing masks.
So if you haven't started planning your costume yet, get on it.
And while you're thinking about it, I want you to be honest.
A lot
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we look at ourselves in the mirror. I know because I've been there multiple times in my life and it's
the worst. If you feel like you're stuck hiding behind masks and costumes
all the time, if you find yourself hiding from your true self, I want you to consider talking
with a therapist. Therapy is a place where you can be honest, where you can talk to somebody else and
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Dr. John Diloni, Ramsey personality, is my co-hosthost today open phones at 888-825-5225
John our last caller was uh you and I talked about it during the break briefly it was very
level-headed she'd been through a lot of pain and yet there was a wisdom she was not being
like she was not uh way super emotional about she's really trying to be wise and that was
uh it's not always the case when i'm talking to somebody in a situation i've been through that
much pain you know their daughter's leaving home for college after right after a divorce i mean
she's got a lot of tearing losing her friends losing her community losing her house losing
her husband yeah it was a you can always tell when someone's asking you a question because they want
you just to confirm what they're asking you a question because they want you just
to confirm what they're asking and she was or hey i need some help yeah she really did tell me the
hard stuff yeah really trying to figure it out that that's a really good place for her but it's
also a jumping off point i will tell you this it's one of the harder things in a one-on-one
coaching session that we've had to deal with or even here on the air is in a divorce situation, and it's not a moral construct, it's a math thing,
whether it's right or not we can discuss,
but generally in our culture today still ladies make less than gentlemen.
The income of males is still higher than females,
not necessarily because of the jobs,
not necessarily because a lot of different factors enter into that,
but the fact is the mom generally after the divorce
has a greater reduction in income than the husband.
And she generally, mama bear, tries to keep,
the kids have already had the pain of dad leaving.
Now she doesn't want to have to have them move out of their bedroom,
their next-door neighbor friends that they play kickball with,
and pull them out of their schools.
And so she'll do anything to keep them in a house
that there's no mathematical way she can afford.
And I've watched newly single moms, particularly with young children,
that lady's last child was going off to college.
She had that benefit to this decision.
It made this decision easier.
But when you've got an 8-year-old, a 7-year-old, and a 5-year-old that are crying,
where's daddy, and don't take me out of my kindergarten class that I love,
my Miss Jones or whatever, right?
And you're going to try to find a way to make a payment that does not fit in those
numbers and it usually it sets them back as much as a decade financially instead of just going
like you said it sucks everything's blown up everything's blown up and we've got to move to
a cheaper house and there was that time that that thing happened and families and other generations
just did that right you know the husband died and so the family lost the farm you know there
wouldn't be somebody that loaned them that much money for that long etc right yeah they weren't
there there wasn't an option they were forced into housing that they could afford you know and it's
just it's so freaking emotionally painful though
uh because on the short term it just rips everything out by the hair but on the long
term it's the only thing you can do to recover yeah it's i've gone to telling parents the
greatest gift you can give your kid is not the schools and the stuff it's a regulated you
and so you freaked out single mom trying to pay a payment
she can't pay working six jobs it's an electric so i keep you in a house so everything's okay
but now everything's not okay because you're freaked out everybody lives in a bug zapper then
right exactly versus a mom who's able to laugh and breathe because she can make the two-bedroom
apartment payments is that ideal no it's the worst man it's the worst they're gonna afford
the spaghetti and the peanut butter and jelly but now we can laugh we can breathe we can go for walks out in the park
and your kids nervous systems will adjust to that yeah more than they will the chaos to try to keep
everything as as similar as it was the same the sameness is not the answer right yeah because
nothing's the same right everything's gone if you can afford it and want to stay that's
fine i don't have a problem with that but i will tell you that probably seven out of ten times i'm
looking at the numbers with somebody in this situation they got to move and i got to be the
one to tell them yeah divorce is just one of those things it's so it's so pervasive it happens so
often um that everybody thinks it's just going to continue on We don't realize how painful it is and how disruptive it is to every corner of our life.
It's very real.
Haley is with us in Oklahoma.
Hi, Haley.
Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hey, Dave.
Hey, what's up?
Okay, so my husband and I just really don't want to be stuck
in middle class the rest of our life.
We've been married 10 years now.
We did your baby steps.
One, I think we made it to two maybe at the beginning about four years ago. My husband
lost his job during COVID and we moved from Northwest Arkansas over to Oklahoma. And the
current job he has now, he's making $65,000 a year. We live paycheck to paycheck. He has a brand-new truck that is required by the job.
It has to be five years or newer.
Really, really just trying to look for another job.
He's been actively looking and applying.
So my question is, how do we get him a good job to support, like, our family?
We are currently in, we're fixing to have a fourth baby.
We have outgrown our one vehicle
that we do have.
That's his truck.
We're going to need a newer vehicle.
Just, we feel like it's this recurring mountain
of living paycheck to paycheck
and trying to set back money.
And when he lost his job during COVID,
we had money set back in savings
and depleted all of that
because he was just working odds and ends jobs trying to make ends meet.
We both went to college.
Both have bachelor's degrees.
What's your degree in?
It's just poultry science and ag business.
Okay.
And you have four littles at home.
Yes.
And that's your job.
Three littles.
I'm pregnant with a fourth one.
No, three and a half. Okay. And that's your full three littles i'm pregnant with the fourth one no three and
three plus three and a half okay and that's your full-time job okay um and his degree is in what
same thing and you've got a degree and you've got a uh how much debt not the truck is how much debt
um the truck is about 38 000 left okay and what else we have about
i think maybe five thousand dollars more um just um one of my student loans that um
that no i was going to get we got that last year um and then how much is it just
it's 4500 and he has a 4848,000 truck. And what else?
And then we have $1,000 on our credit card, and that's it.
Okay.
All right.
You realize that you all lied to yourself about the truck, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, because you can buy a five-year-old truck a lot cheaper than he bought that,
that met the guideline for work.
Yeah. Yeah, it has to be five years in there and do
they pay him do they pay him in addition to 65 000 for the truck um very little he gets like
so many cents per mile it does not match up at all okay so his truck well it's only good for
another two years before it falls out of the requirements. And so, obviously, looking for another job to get out of that and try to sell his truck
and be able to pay cash something for us.
Yeah, I mean, you can make $55,000 a year and be way ahead of this.
This is a bad deal.
Yeah.
It's a really, really bad deal.
Yeah.
So, how big a company is this that he works for?
Decently sized. yeah so i how big a company is this that he works for um decently i mean they got they got a thousand employees a hundred employees what um probably more than like a couple thousand and they're in
three four five i think four different states um they're one of the top producers so yeah i think
he needs to get a job yeah that's part of the answer and and you guys can't
you can't lie to yourself next time and say that a 48 000 our truck fits your world because it
doesn't fit your world just because somebody told you that you had to do that to get a job
you just don't take that job that's not a job that was a that was a no that you said yes to yeah
because you're desperate you're desperate and scared you're a little to feed i understand but but that was a no you should have done some you know you've been better
off doing almost anything else that that was a trap and so yeah you know once he starts getting
a sniff on a couple of other positions i would tell him to go to his supervisor and say i can't
stay anymore and finance a truck for this multimillion-dollar company.
Yeah.
This multimillion-dollar company wants me to buy them a truck, and I can't afford it.
I have four kids to feed, and you don't pay me enough to finance a truck for you.
So screw this.
Yeah.
I mean, really.
How do you set money back to do that even when you do get a new job and living paycheck to paycheck?
Yeah.
Well, you get the truck sold.
And the only answers are three things.
One is expenses go down.
Two is income goes up.
And three is we manage the snot out of the money we have using a detailed budget.
That part you're probably not doing.
You're probably doing a decent job of what you got. You're not you're probably not doing. You're probably doing
a decent job of what you got. You're not flush or anything like that. You're not wasteful,
but you could tighten this up a lot, and then you guys got to work on getting your income up,
and that includes you doing something from home. 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.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today
as we talk about your life and your money.
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Linda is with us in Seattle.
Hi, Linda.
Welcome to The Ramsey Show.
Hi.
Thank you very much for taking my call.
Sure.
What's up? So I have a 26 year old son and he's getting a PhD
and he's a great kid. Love him to death. Great heart. Um, he doesn't make a ton. He's on a budget.
He's very aware of his expenses. He's in a low rent area. The problem is he doesn't
always have enough money to make ends meet without going into debt. My question is,
should I be supplementing him monthly? I can't afford it. Or should I wait until he has a car
repair and then, you know, give him that or a computer repair?
I'm trying to get him on his feet.
He has at least four more years of his program.
I don't want to enable him, but we both don't want him.
He knows we don't want him to go into debt.
What's the program?
It's an environmental science program.
Did he just start?
He's one year in.
It's a five-year program for a PhD.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
So they are.
I guess here's my, for what?
What's he going to do?
Well, he's probably going to be working in a nonprofit when he's done.
He loves what he does.
He's doing a lot of research.
He does get paid.
He has good benefits, medical, all of that.
So he's going for five years to get a job that doesn't pay well
well i'm hoping he will make you know enough money when he gets out to support himself
well i hope so after five freaking years working on a phd um but i mean his whole goal here is to
work in an underpaid job that That's what he's working towards.
You know, he might own the nonprofit, actually, when he's done.
Well, then we would call that a for-profit.
Why does it have to be a nonprofit?
I'm so confused.
Is he a TA?
Yes.
Okay. Does he have some restrictions on he a TA? Yes. Okay.
Does he have some restrictions on his work schedule?
Yeah, like he can't really go out and get another job right now.
Says who?
Is that program specific?
Because here's why.
I got a second PhD while working as an associate dean, dean of students at a law school, while also being a parent, while also working in the graduate school,
teaching classes for extra money on top of all the other things.
Now, I had a heroic wife that kept the house duct taped together and everything moving and running, but I hear grad students a lot telling me,
you know, i just can't
and my first instinct is i did and you can and i had to go see clients on top of that i mean i had
to see my clients at six o'clock in the morning or seven in the morning or seven at night because i
had to go to my full-time job and be a parent and so he if he's got TA responsibilities, that's 20 hours a week and he gets his benefits and his tuition discount and his lab work.
But there's nothing to say he can't go work at a restaurant and go get a full-time job
somewhere else in an adjacent field that maybe is going to lead to career opportunities bigger
than I just want to go, whatever.
See what I'm saying?
I guess I just don to go whatever. See what I'm saying? I guess I just don't buy it.
Now, if you're getting a PhD in psychology,
they will tell you, you cannot work another job.
Or law school, you can't work another job
because it's too demanding.
Cool, fine.
The payoff on the other end of those jobs
is very different than what you're describing as well.
And so I guess I just have a hard time with the,
well, he just can't because he's busy.
I don't buy it.
You figure out the time. You figure out the time.
You figure out the time.
And if you can't, then you'll have to, as a family, say, okay, he can't afford this.
As a family, are we going to subsidize this for the next four years?
Because this problem doesn't go away.
It's not, you know, if you create sustainability by you subsidizing it, then it's a four-year promise.
Because we don't have an exit ramp to you subsidizing it, right?
Right.
Okay.
And I don't like, personally, I don't like the problem specific.
You just call us if you have a problem because that's going to lead to a lot of resentment.
And, well, did you do that?
I'd much rather prefer, hey, we're going to agree to cover your rent.
Yeah, I think I would do the monthly amount if you're going to promise to do something for four years.
But then on top of that answer to your question, we're giving you two pieces of advice.
The first one is John's saying he needs to explore work avenues because –
Lots of them.
Yeah.
And most people who went to college worked.
Most people.
It's not.
It's very unusual for someone even working on a Ph.D. program to not work and work a lot.
I worked 40 to 60 hours.
I graduated in four years with a 2.97 because I was at work all the
time and I got out of school. So, um, cause I wanted out of school. I was paying for it. I
didn't have any desire to hang around that place. I wanted out. And so, um, I want to quit writing
them checks and start receiving checks. That was my goal. So that, that's the first piece of advice.
The second piece of advice is i think there's a
little bit more if i'm his mom and dad that before i start writing them checks because basically i'm
endorsing this path i want to know more about where this is taking me because um education
for education's sake is a bad plan when you're this broke. It's a luxury. It's a luxury. And
education that's not for luxury is for return on investment. I'm not hearing a good return
on investment here in what you're describing. And so if you're going to go an extra five years
to school beyond a normal four or five years, now we're talking about a decade you've been in school
then you should have pay north of six figures day one because you can graduate with a four-year
degree in logistics right now and walk out making 90 to 100 you can be a diesel mechanic with a two-year degree and make 90 to 100. So, you know,
what's your ROI on this extra five years of PhDing? And it needs to be more than I want to be called
doctor. Oh, absolutely. And I've got friends who are into environmental issues and then they have
their day job and then they work on these things on the weekends.
They go to presentations.
If you're passionate about something, you can study it all day long,
but you don't take five years off of life to go do this thing
unless it's leading towards an obtainable goal.
The PhD should be a requirement for additional income
that you wouldn't have without the PhD.
Yeah, or licensure or something. It takes you to licensure, which takes you to additional income that you wouldn't have without the PhD. Yeah, or licensure or something.
You have to have.
Well, it takes you to licensure, which takes you to additional income.
You know, you pass the bar.
Right.
Hello.
You know, something like that.
It needs to take you somewhere.
And so I really want to understand more about that if I'm in your shoes because I love my son.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Thanks for joining us.
Alex is with us in Chattanooga.
Hi, Alex.
Welcome to the show.
Hey, Dave.
How are you today?
Better than I deserve.
What's up? Hey, I love the show. Hey, Dave. How are you today? Better than I deserve. What's up?
Hey, I love the show.
I love the network.
I actually came and did my debt-free screen with you a couple years ago, so thank you for you and your team and all that you do.
Thank you.
No, thank you.
So I think I know the answer to this, but I kind of want to get to, I guess, kind of
a second question if I can.
I have an opportunity.
I'm a registered nurse. I'm 35
single, no kids. There's an opportunity for me to stop travel nursing and relocate to San Francisco
for a staff position. I would be making, with no overtime, about $225,000. And I've talked to some people that can make about up to $300,000 a year with overtime.
I do, like I said, I understand it's San Francisco.
It's very expensive and all of those things.
But just with traveling, there's just a lot of uncertainty.
Your contract can be canceled at any time.
The pay rates have gone down since COVID.
I'm kind of tired of being on the road, kind of all those things.
I've talked to people that have been out there, and they like it.
California does have some strong unions, and with that, you have, you know, your guaranteed
staffing ratios because, you know, the license is online.
Okay, how can we help?
I'm sorry.
I know in's San Francisco.
Is it crazy to think to move out there for, I mean,
with the high cost of living out there?
Well, I mean, like, you know, you've obviously analyzed that. $300,000 in San Francisco is not $300,000 in Columbus, Ohio or Dallas, Texas.
You've got, number one, you've got a 14% tax now, income tax there,
that you don't have in other states.
And you've got an extremely high cost of living.
San Francisco is one of the most expensive cities to live in in the world.
And so as long as you've analyzed all of that and you still want to go,
I'm not going to tell somebody not to do what they want to do.
That's what you want to do.
Okay.
There's nothing wrong with what you're analyzing.
What is interesting to me, though, is this.
What I might think about, if I'm you,
because I feel like the fact that you're asking us the question, it's almost like you've got some hesitation.
Like you're not really complete gung-ho, right?
So one of the things I always like to do is I make better decisions if I have lots of options.
You presented me only two options.
A declining income with travel
and your declining desire to travel versus San Francisco.
Those are only two options.
What about a third or a fourth or a fifth option that includes other cities at $200,000
that nets out of lifestyle and taxes about the same.
And it's a quality of life you like more or less.
I don't know.
But it feels like you have to take this because it's your only exit from the road.
And that's simply not accurate.
Yes, sir.
I completely agree.
Yeah, I'm essentially looking forward to, like I said, I'm single.
I want to go somewhere and settle, set some roots.
And so I can as a nurse.
I do have the luxury of going most places.
I mean, just at nursing pay, like I said, I live in Chattanooga.
The pay in the South is just one of the lowest.
I've lived in Memphis and traveled around the South over the last couple of years.
I mean, the pay that I got offered here in Chattanooga was $33 an hour.
Okay, but again, that's...
You're using a barbell, dude.
You've got one on one side and one on the other.
There's a big middle range there.
I've gotten myself in trouble chasing a salary amount
that made me feel like I was being valued and not doing the math in a 360 degree way.
Yeah.
And again, if you keep saying I'm single, if you're single and you think the San Francisco vibe is cool and that's a vibe you want to live in, it's a lifestyle, you know, the environment you want to plug into socially that kind of stuff have at it
dude i got no issue with that at all um i'm a redneck hillbilly my my my the chances of me
doing that's zero because i would stand out like a sore thumb there so wouldn't fit in and wouldn't
want to so but that's okay that doesn't mean it's not for you right so i can't i
can't advise you on that part of it you've got to decide that for yourself but um the uh so you got
to but i i am going to challenge you to find three more solid offers and quit just blowing up the
entire south oh come on give me a break freaking atlanta georgia nashville tennessee which is the
center of hospital corporation of america
and three other major hospital companies a major medical corridor it right runs right through
freaking nashville is underpaid give me a break not a chance not a chance so other thing go spend
some time when my wife and i were deciding we we decided hey we're going to leave west texas
um we went and visited some places one of them was in nashville we're going to leave West Texas. We went and visited some places.
One of them was in Nashville.
We came here to watch, to see a concert
and to just spend a couple of days here.
And we left thinking, all right, that one's on our list.
And so go experience the place, man.
But I think you're tied to somebody said 300,000
and your heart went, that's right.
And you're going to make it work you're gonna tell
yourself any number of stories to back up i want to make three hundred thousand dollars and good
on you but don't do it just for that number yeah that would be a mistake because i think you could
have a comparable number other places if you put a little research into your job hunt you know get on king coleman.com and let's
lay that out but i it's but again if you just decide to go do it kristen
alex there's nothing wrong with the beautiful part of the country it's absolutely gorgeous
you're right and um and there's a lot of very cool stuff there there's a lot of very uncool
stuff there too but um it's just a matter of where you want to live and what you want to do
and what you want to plug into.
But no, is it a slam dunk decision?
No, it's not.
And you make better decisions the more options you have.
Options, options, options gives you power.
It gives you the sense to calm down.
You can negotiate better with the other option
if you've got real options outside of your thing.
And so always have lots of different things you can do when you're making a decision.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
You know, I was with Ken Coleman and some of the guys working on his team earlier this morning.
We're talking about one of the things that's popping up right now with people looking for positions is um soft skills uh we've got a a group of people regardless of age that um or which
generation if you want to label it one way or another that that uh don't have good eq emotional
quotient they cannot cannot do conflict.
They cannot do basic conversations, look people in the eye,
string a sentence together, have a standard, normal, in-person,
person-to-person conversation because they've done everything on their phone and their brains are wired and they've lost the ability to do it other than
they can text you across the room.
They can't sit and talk to you like a person.
And so these soft skills are a big problem.
Decision-making is one of those soft skills because what happens in the digital world, if you don't like something, you just move.
Boom, it's gone.
Boom, it's gone.
Boom.
You can't do that if you move to San Francisco.
You can't.
Boom, it's gone.
It's harder to undo real decisions instead of virtual decisions.
Virtual means not real. That's what it means, literally. That's the meaning of the word. It's
not real. It's a fake version of real. That's what virtual means. Look it up in the dictionary.
So, you know, soft skills in that goes decision-making. So decision-making is one
good decision-making rule is you needmaking is one good decision-making rule is you need more options.
Another decision-making rule is the more important the decision,
the larger the impact of the decision, the slower you make the decision.
That's why you don't go out on a date and get married the next day.
Right?
That's why you don't go look at a car and buy it when you walk on the lot.
It's why you don't buy a house having looked at only one,
right?
Big decisions require length of time to make wise decisions.
Small decisions you can make fast because you can,
you know,
what pack of gum do I want?
You can make that decision.
If it's wrong,
it doesn't kill you,
but the other stuff will throw you off.
Slow down on the big stuff.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today.
Well, let's face it.
Taxes suck.
They're confusing.
We don't like them.
No one wants to finance a $25,000 toilet seat,
and we all know we're doing it. We all know the government's irresponsible with our money when
we send it to them, but we have to do it because there's jail time involved. So we have to do it,
right? So we're going to do what we're supposed to do. So people ask all the time, what's the
truth about taxes? Well, here's the truth. Don't trust just anybody with your taxes.
There's a lot of people say that taxes are like a lot of things.
A lot of people say they know something about it and they don't.
So if you have a complicated return, we have vetted and worked with in detail,
done the due diligence on about 1,000 folks that are professional tax preparers
that can help you with a really complicated return.
They're Ramsey Trusted.
The reason they're trusted is we've checked them out up and down, right? And so just go to Ramsey Trusted or go to ramseysolutions.com slash tax pro, and you can find the one in your area,
and they'll sit down with you. Now, if you do not have a complicated return,
I wouldn't spend that much money. I would just go get the Ramsey Smart Tax software.
It's very inexpensive, 30, 40 bucks.
There's no extra add-ons, no gotchas.
Not going to try to sell you a credit card or some of that other crap like these people at TurboTax.
Their whole thing is they want to sell you something else other than tax work.
And so our deal is real simple.
That's why there's now, this year I think there will be about 100,000 people
prepare their taxes with the Ramsey Smart Tax software.
Because it's very simple.
You're just trying to boom, boom, boom, boom.
There we go.
Ramseysolutions.com slash taxpro will hook you up.
Kristen's with us in San Antonio.
Hi, Kristen.
Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hey, Dave and John.
I am kind of considering maybe buying my mom a car.
She's turning 70 very soon.
I'm super excited for her, and I just want to do something totally generous,
just blow her mind, and just want to be smart about it too.
That's awesome.
Very cool.
Good on you, Kristen.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I assume you have the money in cash.
I got my mom a high five when she turned 70.
Now I'm feeling bad.
Well, I've given her many high fives, but I'm ready to maybe do a little bit more.
I do have the money in cash.
How much is the car?
Well, I haven't even started looking too seriously because I just didn't know if I was being crazy or not.
Well, what do you think roughly?
I mean, are you talking about spending $100,000 or $50,000 or $10,000?
Between $25,000 and $30,000.
Okay.
All right.
And what's your net worth?
$700,000.
Okay.
Good for you.
Getting there.
Good for you.
So what are you, $50,000?
$42,000.
Yeah, good for you.
What do you make?
Thank you.
Last year, made a little over $200.
Hopefully on track for that this year, which is kind of why.
You're killing it.
And you're out of debt?
I am totally debt-free.
I have $65 left on my house.
Good for you.
So I'm so close.
Good for you.
Yeah, thank you.
Okay.
So what would be wrong with buying her a car?
Because this all sounds very wise to me.
I just am so fr frugal i don't spend
money i just i can tell i want to blow her mind i just yeah it's just i think that would be really
cool um i mean is there any issue with the relationship with her no my mom is not controlling
not enabled you're not trying to make up for some childhood scar by not doing this?
No.
I just want to bless her.
She took care of my dad when he was sick.
He passed away 25 years ago.
He was 40.
He died from cancer.
She's never remarried.
She lives just a quiet life.
She'd be there for my sister and I in a heartbeat with anything.
She's supported me my whole life.
No guilt, no nothing.
I just love my amazing mom and just want to do something outrageous for her.
Touchdown.
You're very cool.
I really like you a lot.
Thank you.
I hope my kids say something about me like that.
That would be neat.
I can't speak, Kristen, because I'm going to cry, and I haven't done that yet on any of these shows,
and I'm pretty dang close.
I cried in Applebee's commercial.
Kristen, you're pretty amazing.
You're pretty amazing, honey.
Go buy the car.
There's absolutely zero check in anything you're saying.
Please send us a photo or a video of your mom getting it
and send it here to the guys on the show.
Yeah, we'll put it up on the YouTube.
I just want to see it personally. That's a beautiful story. Yeah, it'll put it up on the YouTube. I want to see it personally.
It's a beautiful story.
Yeah, it's a great story.
I've got friends that have done that.
I don't want to tell a lot of people, but I want to tell you guys.
You know what I mean?
I want to tell you guys.
I don't need to tell friends, family.
It can be just for her.
So I definitely will take a photo.
One of my favorite stories, and we videoed it.
We haven't played it in a while.
I don't know if it's on the YouTube channel or not.
It's an old story.
A buddy of mine, his dad, this friend of mine is 60,
so his dad is 50-something, right?
So his dad sold a, I don't know, 1930 or 40 or something car
when that wouldn't have been that old old it would have been 1960s or
something okay i know you're talking about yeah i'm trying to think yeah and he sold the car when
his kid was when my buddy was born his dad couldn't afford this car anymore he sold he sold it to a
friend down the street that friend kept it for many many years and sold it to a pastor
and when and my my buddy now is making big money and he went and found that pastor still had it,
talked him into selling it back to him,
and gave it back to his dad like 50 years later.
I saw that video.
That one got me good, man.
Yeah, and that's a version of what you're doing right here,
and it's really cool.
It's very cool.
Baby step seven is build wealth and give.
We tell people all the time, live like no one else.
So later you can give and live like no one else.
And that's right.
Exactly what you're doing.
You're amazing.
Buy your mom a car, girl.
You did it.
Touchdown.
That's so cool.
It's so fun.
This is what money's good for.
It's not good for much else.
Yeah.
Feed you. Feed you and feed others. It's about what it's good for. It's not good for much else. Yeah. Feed you.
Feed you and feed others.
It's about what it's good for.
It's really good.
Carrie is with us in Atlanta, Georgia.
Hey, Carrie, welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hey, how are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Okay, so I've been listening to your show for about eight months.
I'm on Baby Step number two.
I've paid off about $12,000 worth of debt.
I have about $93,000 left to go besides my mortgage, so not including mortgage.
Question, I had some repair guy come in and said that I need a new HVAC system.
I may need a new electrical repair and plumbing altogether.
It's going to be about $21,000.
I know you, yeah.
I've already put it out.
Stop, stop.
Let me just tell you.
In the HVAC world, there is a segment of that world that does that.
Don't let that guy back in your house.
He's a crook.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm calling BS.
He told you your family was in danger, didn't he?
Yes, he said that.
Yeah, I thought so.
Our air quality.
Yeah.
And your house may burn down, and it'll be your fault that your children died.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Don't let this guy back in your house, okay?
You can tell I know the script, right?
Yeah.
Yeah. absolutely.
Yeah, there's a segment of the heating and air business that does a wonderful job,
and there is a segment that are complete shysters,
and they will come in and tell you that your furnace is leaking
and everybody in the house is going to die of carbon monoxide poisoning if you don't fix it,
although it's been this way for five years and we all seem to be fine but yeah right this is a this is bullcrap now do you maybe need a new
furnace in the future yeah but is it nearly as expensive or urgent as you were told a hundred
percent no you can do this much cheaper than this bozo and it's probably not as urgent as he said i'm not 100 sure
but i'm 99.7 sure okay um i've already put about 5500 into the house to get the crawl space
waterproofed um the house is about 30 years old and i only plan on being here about another seven years. Do you think I should put
more money into the house? Well, I mean, if the, if the heating and air is not working,
you're going to have to fix the heating and air, but right now we don't have that issue.
Okay. Yeah. You're going to have to put more money in the house. If you live there and something
breaks, you're going to have to do that. But do you upgrade $21,000 worth of stuff because some bozo? No.
And Carrie, you owe $100,000, don't you?
Um, 93, 93, not including my mortgage. Yeah. Stop, stop fixing your house unless something's
broken. It's in dire shape. If nothing's leaking or sparking or anything like that,
just keep moving. Yeah.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Well, we've got three events coming up where you can get Ramsey teachings live in person
in an auditorium with thousands of other people just like you. Total money makeover weekend event
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Join us in Nashville and you can leave money stress at the door. We're not only going to get
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We're going to walk through the whole thing.
It is a total money makeover weekend, May 10 and 11.
On the campus here, the Ramsey event center on the hill it only holds
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thing is i'm going to be doing something i've never done before dave ramsey's investing essentials a
two-night virtual event may 21 and 22 it's my personal playbook on investing in real estate george camel and i are
going to unpack the basics of investing and also go deep on real estate and other investing and
the scams that are out there and the things that the rich don't do the lies that are told to you
by tiktok and other social media platforms about this the last one is a money and marriage event next fall, October 24 and 25. This is Dr. John Deloney and Rachel Cruz with real-life answers to your hard questions about money and marriage.
A whole weekend away with your spouse in Nashville.
Again, the Ramsey Events Center.
All of these events are available at ramsesolutions.com slash events.
All of these events are fun.
You will laugh.
You will cry. You can bring the person who thinks you're crazy for doing this stuff. All of these events are fun. You will laugh. You will cry.
You can bring the person who thinks you're crazy for doing this stuff. They will leave being as
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stuff we teach absolutely works and we love helping people. So make plans to attend one of
these. We would love to have you here on campus with us and stop by anytime and watch the show. We do it on the glass here right now from one to four
central time every day, Monday through Friday. There's a couple of Ramsey personalities sitting
in these seats. I'm usually one of them if I'm in town and then the rest of them mix and match and
fill it in and that's how we do it. So come and us we'd love to have you sean is with us sean is in kansas city hey sean welcome to the ramsey show
hi thank you so much for having me on sure what's up well uh i wanted to ask you about the baby
steps i've been watching the show for about a month and uh i suppose i should give you a little
bit of backstory as well just to give you an idea of why I'm asking the question. Um, my wife and I just had our first son, a couple months old. Thank you. Yeah. So,
uh, John was nice enough to help me out there. He decided to throw up his lunch while I was waiting.
Um, so I wanted to ask about baby steps three and four, because I was actually able to get some 401k from my previous job.
And I was able to actually save up quite a bit of money while I worked at that job.
And so doing baby step two to pay down all the debt is technically something I can do.
But then with the amount of money I would free up each month, it would seem like it would take
me forever to do baby step three. And then when I saw baby step four, and correct me if I'm wrong, because you match your employer,
right? And then you do 15% and 15%, I believe. So it just seems like...
I'm confused. There's no 15% and 15%. So, okay, baby step one is $1,000 in the bank. Baby step
two is you pay off all of your debt except your home.
Do you have any debt except your home?
We do, yes.
Okay.
How much is that?
So that is close to $40,000.
On what?
So we have two car payments.
We have a hospital bill for my son's birth.
And then we also have to take him to the emergency room.
And then my wife's student loan debt.
And how much is her student loan debt is how much of the car?
How much is the student loan debt?
I'm sorry.
$33,000.
So most of this, you have two car payments that are $7,000?
If I pay off both the cars.
I asked you how much debt you had.
You said $40,000.
Then you told me you had $ three thousand dollars of student loan debt that means you've
got seven thousand dollars on two cars and the hospital bills you only owe seven thousand dollars
on two cars i owe five thousand on the two cars okay all right wow okay yeah because my son's
hospital bill was i got you i got I got you. I got you.
Okay.
I just, because I was thinking you, I thought you didn't tell me all the debt, right?
That's what I was, okay.
It is right.
I got you.
Okay.
So your household income is what?
About $70,000.
Good.
And you're 26, right?
No, I'm 31.
31.
Thank you for telling me that.
Okay.
That's okay.
I mean, you got a brand new baby and you're making $70,000, right?
So, all right.
And what do you do for a living?
I'm an electrical apprentice.
Okay.
All right.
So, first thing is we clear up the $40,000.
Now you don't have any payments.
Then you build an emergency fund of three to six months of expenses,
because some of your debt is due to not having an emergency fund.
Right? Okay. three to six months of expenses because some of your debt is due to not having an emergency fund right okay and then once we have an emergency fund of three to six months of expenses how fast can you do that you don't have any payments in the world you're living you haven't been living on
a written budget yet you've just been discussing the possibility of doing this whole Ramsey thing
but once you're living on a written budget for 90 days you're going to feel like you got a raise
because your money's going to work a lot harder.
Right now, there's a lot of waste in your budget.
So my wife and I were discussing that and how we can cut back on the budget.
You haven't done the budget yet.
Well, we were discussing things we could cut back on.
It's theory.
Okay.
When you actually start doing it, you will find more margin than you realize you have you're
doing all this stuff in your head right now and on in hypotheticals rather than actually freaking
doing it so actually start doing a budget for 90 days and then i promise you from 32 years of doing
what i do you will feel like you've gotten a raise you will find money you didn't realize you had
now then you're going to be able to build a three to six months of
emergency fund. It's going to take you about six months to a year after you pay off the $40,000
in debt. Then and only then are you going to start putting money into your 401k. And then and only
then, baby step four is 15% of your household income. Does your wife work outside the home?
Yeah, she works outside the home.
What does she make?
She makes about, so together we make 70.
She makes about 35 of that.
Okay.
All right.
So when will your apprenticeship be done?
In a couple of years.
I just started about six months ago and what will
your income do then double uh i'll go up to forty dollars an hour yeah and you're at 20 now
uh yeah yeah it's double kind of like double yeah okay and so um then then what we're going to do is
you're you're going to be making $100,000 a year,
and you will be debt-free, and you're putting $15,000 a year,
15% of your household income, regardless of match.
You put in 15% of your household income.
So by then you've been making $100,000, you're putting $15,000 away,
and by then you'll be 35 years old.
And so you have 30 years if you never get a raise to invest $15,000 a year.
Okay. And that's going to amount to about $8 million at 65.
Okay. So I understand what you're saying, but my question is, and if I'm doing this all in my head,
right, how do we plan for the extra money properly when baby steps two and three are essentially what you say, living on beans and rice?
Because if I have to take my son to the emergency room again, if I have to get a car, the only way you know how to do that is to…
You have to get a car?
What is have to get a car?
Well, in case something happens and we have to pay for it to get repaired
or we have to maybe get a car.
You have $1,000 set aside.
Or if one of the vehicles breaks down or something.
Bro, what if you keep doing what you've been doing
and you stay broke as hell for the rest of your life?
You could do that, too.
That's an option so my question is in those emergencies i have the savings fund for three to six months
would you recommend i pull from that resource yes it's an emergency yeah if your kid has to
go to emergency if you have your three to six months if you're in baby step two no you're only
going to have a thousand dollars that's all you're going to have so you're going to have to stop your
baby you're going to stop your baby step two your debt, you're only going to have $1,000. That's all you're going to have. So you're going to have to stop your baby.
You're going to stop your baby step two, your debt snowball at that point and fix that.
If that happens during the two years that it takes you to get out of debt, but you should
be out of debt in two years or less.
So listen, dude, you're over analyzing this.
You need to go do it.
That's the difference.
And then tell me how it's wrong.
Millions of people have done what I'm telling you to do.
It absolutely works.
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.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality,
and host of the Dr. John Deloney Show, is my co-host today.
Thank you for joining us.
You can hear him every week on the Ramsey Networks as well.
If you want to be sure and tune in on that,
and check out many of his number one best-selling books on relationships,
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So we're here to help.
The phone number is 888-825-5225.
Luke's in Kansas City.
Luke, what's up in your world?
Hi, thank you for taking my call.
Sure.
How can we help?
Yeah, so I am considering going into business with my father, and my question is, I wanted
to see, do you have any advice for going into business with family, and what should I be most aware of? Yeah, don't. I'm just kidding. Totally kidding.
I'm sitting by a guy who runs a pretty successful family business. So I'm just being a smart aleck,
dude. I enjoy working with my family in the business. But we have worked at it so that we
could enjoy it.
All right?
So I can do a whole seminar on this that takes eight hours.
I'll try to give you some high points.
Okay?
Yeah.
Number one, when you're on site working with your father, he is not your father.
He's your boss.
Okay.
So you don't use your whiny teenager voice on him, right? You treat him like
you would treat your boss at another place. He owns the freaking company. You work for him.
You're an employee act like it. Okay. And he in turn, my advice to him is to treat your son with the same dignity and respect
and compensation that you would another team member in that same position.
So when my son came on board out of college, he started selling radio ads, which is one of the
hardest jobs in the building because you have to put up with these things called ad agencies which are a royal pain in the butt and he had a really tough year year
and a half but he wasn't working for me he was working for a guy that worked for a guy that
worked for a guy that worked for me several layers down in the company right but he was getting the
college knocked off of him for sure he had you know and so he had a tough year and a half here but he got paid the same pay that the
other sales people selling ads got paid and he treated me with the same respect that he would
the ceo of a company that he worked for if he'd gone to work somewhere else and i treated him
the same way with respect while we're on site my kids don't even call me dad on site they call me Dave because if you go into a meeting and
say my daddy said it's a different meeting right then room just tilted yeah bro let me tell you
the first time Rachel Cruz started saying Dave freaking said this and this in that meeting and
I was I finally said are you setting me up I don't like I don't am I supposed to be like yeah
or no is like I didn't know what to do and that's when she clued me in no no no here at work he's
Dave he's Dave yeah at home when I'm at home I put on my Papa Dave hat and I spoil her kids
that's my job give them lots of sugar and send them home so that's my deal right
so um you know and so when we're at work we we wear work hats, and when we're at home, we change our hat.
And so I'm dad or Papa Dave or whatever at home,
and I'm father-in-law at home, that kind of thing.
I have daughters-
How do you keep that?
How do you set that boundary to be consistent?
We police it on each other.
We don't violate.
We don't talk business either except on site.
Okay.
So Christmas dinner is not spoiled for everyone else by the two goobers that work there.
Right, because nobody else wants to hear all the crap that you two are going to deal with.
Yeah.
You know, your wife doesn't want to hear it all.
She hears it all when you come home at night anyway, you know, that kind of stuff.
So, you know, you need to have some on-site, off-site rules like that,
and he needs to pay you
fairly but not overpay you pay you for the position not for the position of son okay and
and then you need to get in there and earn your dadgum stripes and earn the right to move up to
the organization so that no one looks down on you when you do move up in the organization
because this guy worked twice as hard as everybody else.
You got to work twice as hard to be respected because they immediately think you're the
duper boss's son and you got to earn the team, earn the, with the rest of the team.
And our kids do that.
They've done a wonderful job of working.
They work, they work their tails off, man.
And, um, our team has great respect them, and I'm very proud of that.
So that's a couple of things that you can do.
Another thing or two to remember is that no family business is more or less functional than the family is.
Yeah.
So if you have tremendous family dysfunction, if your relationship with your
dad is wicked sideways, well, don't expect it to be anything else when you go to work over there,
it's going to be just as dumb as it is otherwise. But if you and your dad get along good,
you like fishing together, hunting together, you like doing whatever it is you do together,
all that kind of stuff. You like hanging out as two adults now together, then that's going to
work real good inside the business. My son and I, we ski together.
We do all kinds.
We shoot together.
We do all kinds of stuff.
My daughters and I do stuff.
I mean, we enjoy each other as adults.
And so that's going to show up in the business.
But if crazy is your family script, then expect crazy to be in the business, right?
So it doesn't go away.
And so that's the problem with it and then
lastly someday your dad's going to want you to you're going to want to take this
place over and he's going to want to step aside and hand it off you guys need
to start talking about that sooner rather than later your dad founded this
business yeah it's more complicated than that but but in a roundabout way, yes.
Okay, all right.
Well, the person that starts a business from the ground up
has the hardest time handing it off.
Yeah.
Founders have emotional trouble handing it off.
I'm a founder.
Founders are hardheads.
We're stubborn.
It's how we pull this crap off because we would not be denied.
And then when it comes time to turn it over, it's very difficult to do that. It's like putting your kid out for adoption. And it's really hard for founders
emotionally to do that. So I've had to really concentrate on that and work hard at it. It's
not been an easy emotional journey for me to turn this thing over. And, you know, my son's now the
president of Ramsey and I'm the CEO, but he runs a lot more of the day-to-day of this place than I do today and so um but that's been a 12-year journey to get to that point it didn't
just and come out of college and step into that I can promise you that let's talk more about your
admission of being stubborn and hard-headed let's go there for a minute I'm just kidding
why do you need you need some counseling hours or something no hey um I wouldn't have if I'm just kidding. Why? Do you need some counseling hours or something? No, hey, I wouldn't have,
if I was just a spectator watching you on the stage
say those things you just said,
I would think, yeah, but I've seen it.
And I'll tell you, the first few times
I was around you guys at the lake house
versus in the office,
it's almost like being on the boat all day
and getting onto land and
you have to take a minute to settle in like oh yeah we completely changed gears it's a totally
different shift right and almost um not quite the same there's still a level of respect and distance
but there's a very distinct friend dave like when we're all hanging out versus when we're here at
the office we're here at the office to tangle up it should be yeah and who wants to hang out with a twerp on a boat I mean
or who wants to go yeah with their with their boss you're still trying yeah waking a finger yeah yeah
it's yeah no it's it's it's pretty it's pretty impressive to watch it be separate like that but
it's it's a it's an intentional act it's a practice it doesn't occur and we've studied it to learn how
to do that from other people so it it's a great question, Luke.
Thank you for joining us.
If you want to hear more things like that, we do a podcast every week called Entree Leadership,
where I take calls from small businesses, and you can check that out.
It's one of our Ramsey Network productions, highly rated as well.
Thank you for joining us, America.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality is my co-host.
We're so glad you are here. Hey guys, I want to tell you, thank you. Last week was the largest
ratings week in the history of the Ramsey show in 32 years. The number of YouTube downloads,
the number of podcast downloads and numbers of minutes listened, the ratings on any format that carries this show,
and we got it on almost everything out there.
But the numbers were just astronomical.
I was out of town, so it's a little bit insulting
that you people gave it the best week ever when I wasn't on the air.
But that's okay.
We'll still take the victory.
And very good.
Thank you, guys. And listen, we can still take the victory. And very good. Thank you, guys.
And listen, we can still use your help.
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Thank you.
Our question today comes from Kimberly in Oklahoma.
Kimberly writes, my fiance and I purchased a house together in 2022.
We were both in our 50s and had been homeowners in the past.
Our deed has the phrase right of survivorship in it, where if one of us dies, the property automatically goes to the other.
Well, my fiance passed away late last year, and while researching
about selling the house, I found out he had filed a quit claim back in October right before he had
surgery to remove a tumor. The quit claim deeds his half of the house to his sons, who are 23 and
26. Neither one of them has any interest in living in the house or paying for it does the quit claim
supersede our deed wording about the right of survivorship if so how do i go about selling my
house if they have legally inherited it should they be paying half the mortgage hoa and taxes
good god what a mess um this is why you do not buy a home with someone you're not married to
even if they're your fiance ever ever this is why i've seen this kind of wicked weird stuff
for 30 years when people buy a house that aren't married well we, we love each other. Good. Get married. Then buy a house.
Stop this stupidity.
Oh, bless your heart, Kimberly.
I'm so sorry.
What a horrible thing to go through.
And what a weird type of betrayal.
So I don't know the answer to your question in Oklahoma.
You need to get a lawyer.
You need to get a lawyer and find out what title you hold. If the survivorship supersedes the quit claim deed.
I suspect it does not.
I do too.
I think he just gave up his half of the ownership to his sons before he died.
So there was no right of survivorship because he didn't own anything when he died.
His kid owned it.
His kids owned it.
So I think you are now partners with your fiance's two kids.
And so I would sit down with them and say, how are we going to do this? We're 50-50 on this house.
How do y'all want to handle it? My best suggestion would be you sell it and take your half
and they get their half because I think that's where you are.
You can check an attorney to be sure, but I'm about 95% sure that's the way it's going to go down.
And hopefully the two little doobers will cooperate,
and you can just sell this thing fairly easily, and you're not going to have a problem.
If they won't cooperate, you're going to have to file a motion in circuit court
to dissolve a partnership, and the judge will force the sale of the house to dissolve the partnership.
And that's going to cost you 10 grand in legal fees.
Maybe five, but probably 10.
And so this is what this betrayal has cost you.
It's unbelievable.
It's unconscionable.
I guess he had a brain tumor and it affected his behavior and his judgment.
I'm trying to give the guy a little credit, not just be a complete scumball since he died.
But who knows?
No, this was just a under the table sideways.
Scummy thing.
Sideways deal that left his fiance high and dry.
He didn't have the courage to either tell her, hey, I want to make sure I leave something to my boys.
And he didn't have the courage to tell
them what was going on yeah this is really really cowardly yeah so that leaves you in a mess and
here's the rule boys and girls out there i know some of you like to shack up and you don't want
to be married and you want to try on a shoe for you buy it and all that crap that you say all the
time you can do whatever you want to do it's not a moral construct it's a legal and financial construct buying a house with somebody you're not married to is straight
up stupid don't do it so well we've been we've been dating for 42 years well great painter get
off the ladder make a decision oh man all right mike is with us. Mike's in Boise, Idaho. Hey, Mike, what's up?
Hi, guys.
Thanks for taking my call.
I have found myself in baby step two as I am finishing college.
I'm getting ready to graduate, and I'm planning on moving out of state, and I just don't know what the process is for how much i should have saved up before i
move enough to cover your moving expenses in your first month's rent or whatever it's going to take
to get into an apartment yeah where are you moving okay so i'm moving um back to california where i
grew up with my brother why he's told me he well it, it's just family, kind of.
What about employment?
What about this idea you just went to school to get a job?
Yeah.
You should get one of those.
Yeah, so I've applied to jobs back in California.
Do you have any?
Well, I still have, like, interviews coming up, so nothing's for sure um what's your degree what's
your degree in i'm finishing with a master's of arts and teaching and a bachelor's in social
studies here in may okay so you're looking for a teaching gig yeah okay you'll get one of those
yeah yeah i've applied to them um and they have such a high need.
I would kind of be shocked if I didn't get one.
Sure.
You can actually be pretty selective, my guess,
and find the districts that pay the most
or are going to put you in the best situation.
Yeah.
One of the hard parts for me is that I'm not going to get paid
for the month of August.
Yeah, that is tough.
I remember that when I was my first year teaching.
I had to float until September.
But this is March.
Go work.
Go Uber and cut grass and walk people's dogs.
I mean, go crazy for a short period of time.
Get you some money, dude.
Yeah, I started teaching driver's ed trying to save some money.
Hey, teaching driver's ed, you may die before you even have to take your first job.
Yeah, no kidding.
The hard thing is I wanted to put down like five grand in a savings account to move,
but that's all that I'll have left on my student loans.
No, you need to make the move first and get the job,
and you can clear the student loan in 20 minutes if you haven't got my five grand okay you need to get set you got to get moved you
got to get moved i mean how you gonna move if you don't go in debt for that you just traded one debt
for the other yeah well my family's been so good to me but i just i don't know knock it out dude
knock it out go get five grand move get settled and pay off five grand your first three checks.
Yeah.
No partying allowed.
You're a social studies teacher now.
You're not a college student.
Hey, and by the way, first-year teacher, are you married or anything?
No.
All right, good.
So my first year of coaching, I took an extra sport and made a little extra money.
I drove the bus for other events and for other teams and made just a little extra money i drove the bus um for other events and for other like
teams and made extra money i worked games um like b team basketball games for extra money
you'll have an opportunity to nickel and dime your way to a lot of additional um cash your first
couple years of teaching if you just get on it and hoof it and get to work there's lots of
opportunities partying is in the rearview mirror. It was at college.
Right.
Now you're a man, my son.
Work, work, work, work, work.
Time to go to work.
Clean up this dadgum mess.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today. Open phones a 888-825- 5225. Kayla
is in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.
Hi, Kayla. Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Hello. Thank you so
much for your time. Sure. What's up?
Yeah, so
my husband and I have been married
for 15 years. We
shortly after that bought our first home.
For the first
13, he was a chemical engineer, and we were able to pay off all but our mortgage.
Yay.
Yes.
In the past two years, we had the calling to enter into pastoral ministry,
which in turn cut our income in half.
So we are commuting currently to our church,
and so we desire, I desire mostly, to be closer to that community and minister to that community,
be at hands and feet there. We refinanced in 2020, which gave us a 3% mortgage rate. And so our mortgage payment is super low. So it's kind of, what do you owe on your home?
So we owe 77,000. What's it worth? Um, we haven't officially got it um estimated but zillow is like 320 okay and how far away
are you moving um it's about 25 minutes from our home okay in most areas of the country that's
called going to work it's not a commute it's not really a commute
i would love a 25 minute commute that'd be amazing you are in the community when you're 25 minutes
away in most areas of the country so if you want to move are there 320 000 homes in that neighborhood
there are yes uh taxes are a little bit higher than what we're used to yeah what's your husband making now
uh together because i also um am working with him side by side uh we make about
80 000 and that doesn't include the housing allowance and the housing allowance is how much How much? Well, so we're new to that, too.
So after taxes, it was $60,000.
Does that make sense?
So they like...
You deduct your housing expenses from your taxes?
The 80 includes the housing?
Yes.
So you have taxable.
Housing is not taxable in a pastoral, but the rest of it is taxable.
So you've got 60 taxable, 20 not taxable.
But your total income, including housing is 80. Correct. Okay. I got you. All right. So what
prohibits you from buying a $320,000 house or a $300,000 house in that neighborhood by selling
this house? Your payment's going to go up some because you've got a tiny little mortgage with a tiny little bump in interest rate.
But 3% on $60,000 or $70,000, if you go from three to six, is nothing.
It's $1,800 a year.
It's $100 a month.
The property taxes are double.
That's one thing that's getting out.
Okay, and so how much does that how much is that so it we would go from 2700 a year
to a comparable home to about 5 000 whoopee okay you can afford it what's making you so nervous
if you don't move up in house but the problem is you went and looked at 500 000 houses didn't you
yeah yeah oh okay yeah go take a cold shower honey you got house fever The problem is you went and looked at $500,000 houses, didn't you? Yeah. Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Go take a cold shower, honey.
You got a house fever.
You need to lower your expectations back down to the level where you were.
You need to buy a $250,000 to $300,000 home if you want to live in that neighborhood.
If you don't want to live in that neighborhood and commute and stay where you are, well, you're fine anyway.
It's 25 minutes.
It's not i mean sometimes we sit in
nashville we sit in traffic 25 minutes just to do but the um yeah so i mean do do whatever you
want to do but look can i say this dave it burns a hole in my chest if you feel called to do a thing
and you feel called to leave job X to go to job Y,
that often means your entire life is going to change.
And you may have to change where you live and change the size of your house.
I want to do this thing that I feel called to do.
With no repercussions.
With no life change.
Yeah, that doesn't happen.
And that almost never happens that way. Doesn't happen, yeah. yeah it's a total call i want you to surrender this big house these
cars this whatever for this life right and that's a that's a that's hard so you may move from a
three hundred thousand dollar house to a two hundred thousand dollars which is paid for by
the way it's paid for you could do that and be have a paid for house and then you can minister
debt free which means you can fully be invested in your community and that's that's a totally different freedom and peace but it's a different
mindset yeah that's a big deal that's uh that's an interesting point and john i mean you have done
that a time or two and so have i when you know after we went broke I went back to doing real estate, and this was 1994, a thousand years ago, right?
After going broke, 94 was the year I got back above $100,000 income.
So I made $120,000 that year in 1993.
I'm sorry.
And I had figured out I had a little bit of speaking.
I had this little $10 book I was starting to sell called Financial Peace out of the trunk of my car.
And I was doing some one-on-one coaching.
And I was thinking about starting a class that later became known as Financial Peace University.
And we figured it up, and I did a pro forma on it. And I told Sharon, I said, I think I can go full time into financial peace
with books, speaking class radio. Wasn't paying anything. We were doing it, but it didn't pay us
anything. And I think I can do that. And I think the first year we'll make 60,000, our income will
go in half. And, um, and I think God's told me to do that, but I'm not sure. What do you think? And she said, well, it doesn't sound like financial peace to me.
You just filed bankruptcy three years ago. She said, no, but we talked about it. We prayed about
it. We both really decided we thought that was what God was saying to do. Felt called. Okay.
Not a hundred percent sure. I never know. I always hesitate to say God told me. But it felt right.
It felt like what I was supposed to do, right?
So we did.
We quit doing real estate, went full-on financial peace in 1994.
Opened a little baby office that was a month-to-month rent in case it didn't work.
We didn't have a long lease.
And first year, I made $61,000.
I hit it exactly, oddly enough.
But that cost $40,000 of sacrifice in the ramsey home from the year before right uh no sixty sixty
thousand sixty twenty well our income went in half yeah like she said her their income went in half
it's the same thing and so you know that meant that we didn't do squat again after recovering
after a bankruptcy starting to heal and actually fix the heat and air and that kind of stuff. And now we don't have any money again. And so, uh, but the next year,
you know, we made a hundred and never been back since of course, but, uh, this thing has grown
every year, but, but that was a call that came with a sacrifice that came with a call, what
you're talking about. And that one worked out. They don't always work out because sometimes you,
it's last night's pizza. It's not the Holy spirit the holy spirit right you know and these people is like well god told me and
then god told me something else then god told me something else right but you have to know that
when you when you go with your gut you follow it or you get called whatever you want to say it
um it always comes with a risk and it always comes with an almost total change and if you
can clear the deck you can you can go from a four-bedroom house
to a three-bedroom house if you clear the deck.
If you look at it as a loss and I'm trying to keep it,
then you're going to drive yourself mad.
The other thing is none of this is permanent.
Like our reduction to 60 was not permanent.
You could pick up real estate the next year.
If you want to be in the neighborhood,
sell your house, buy a $200,000 house,
live there three years and move up.
Save up some money, move up.
Save up some money, up save up some money
move up nothing stays the same it's either going to get worse or it's going to get better maybe
it grows the ministry and the income goes up in that ministry which would not be a bad thing
multiple times across my career i've taken a new job that's less money with higher upside or i've
taken a reduction in like a title if if you will, for a different environment.
I've done that almost every time.
And it's always been, I know I can bet on myself.
I know the environment's good.
I trust the leadership X, Y, Z.
And it works out that way.
But man, it comes at a cost.
It comes at a cost.
Yeah, that's a thing.
So your cost, Kayla, what what we're describing we're not picking
on you it's just this is stuff we've all experienced and um you cannot do this without
a cost the cost is a 25 minute commute or a move to a house smaller than the one you're in
those are your two options. This is The Ramsey Show.
Our scripture of the day, 2 Peter 3, 9.
The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness.
Instead, he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.
Norman Vincent Peale said, promises are like crying babies in a theater.
They should be carried out at once.
I like it. Very good.
Noah is with us in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Hey, Noah, welcome to The Ramsey Show.
Thank you for having me, Dave.
Sure. What's up?
So I am struggling with some family issues.
About two years ago, actually three years ago now,
my work offered me a promotion in which I had to move about 400 miles from where I currently was living. And at that time, I didn't know what to do with the house. We'd only owned it a year.
So some of my family members, my wife's sisters, decided they wanted to rent the house from us.
Well, it turned into two years later, they hadn't paid rent on time once in a year.
They were two months behind on rent, and they had trashed the house.
And we're just trying to struggle with, like, family gatherings are awkward,
and, you know, like.
Oh, I can help you with that. What do we do?
Yeah.
It's your fault.
Yeah.
It's not their fault.
You put two wild, wicked, young, single women into your rental house,
and then you're shocked they tore it up while they weren't paying rent
and you did nothing about it. Yep fault not their fault they just is what they is yeah where's why you
knew what they were when you let them move in there didn't you i was you knew this was stupid
when you did it didn't you yeah my wife couldn't understand the thought of her sisters doing this to us,
so she was very firm that they wouldn't hurt us in this way.
Yeah, she's delusional.
Yeah.
She knew they were crazy too.
You knew they were wild as buck, didn't you?
I did. Yeah. You just turned your dadgum thing into a sorority house so has your sister not called her sisters i mean your wife not called
her sisters the ones that would never do this she has talked with her sisters but they just act like
like they they act like nothing has happened nothing's wrong that they they didn't destroy
this house that was
you know something that we had we had worked hard to get yeah so what does your wife say
does she say they destroyed it or is she in denial too no no she's not in denial she's
she's on board but she's on board with it now but she's also like she's like how do we go to
how do we go to christ Christmas and spend time with the family
and then be like, oh, we're not getting you guys gifts
because you owe us $2,000 in back rent
and the $6,000 or $8,000 in damages that we had to do to get the house livable again
because we ended up moving back into the house.
Okay, let me change gears a minute.
I was picking on you, but it's also the way you go to Christmas
is you take responsibility for this.
It is your fault. That's how you go to christmas you quit blaming them
here's the deal the day they were late the first time you should have moved them
if you're in one of my rental properties and you don't pay your rent you know what we do
we evict your butt if we go over and do an inspection which we do monthly or every two months on every single
residential property we walk through it if a cat lives there or you're partying partying we evict
your butt you're not tearing up my property that's called landlord yeah y'all did not landlord you
didn't you didn't collect your rent and you didn't manage your property you stood back and watched two wild crazy women tear up your stuff and did nothing about it
yeah yeah that's exactly what happened i mean you suck as a landlord dude
yeah it wasn't and it wasn't originally the plan when we bought the house. It was just my work.
I get all that, but you're asking me how you heal the relationships, but you're blaming somebody for being who they is.
You already know who they is.
They're irresponsible party animal sorority girls who don't give a crap about anybody,
and you brought them in as a tenant,
and then you're shocked that they're irresponsible party girls who don't give a crap about anybody
who happens to be kin to me yeah and it wasn't even partying it was more like people with mental
health issues like depression and they just they couldn't keep the house clean and no they didn't
keep the house clean they could but they didn't depressed
people clean houses all the time happens all the time yeah if they're getting evicted if they don't
they they suddenly magically clean the house so what's your plan moving forward have you evicted
them from the house yes we so about a year ago this this all started three years ago a year ago
my work offered me an opportunity
to work from home and i said okay i'm going to move back into this house so are you back in it
yes i am okay so it's all fixed and it's all in the rearview mirror so the only question now
is you lost the money and you think you're going to get it ha ha you're not getting it i would eat
it forget it walk away forgive and forget they is who they is we love them i've got relatives that
vote wrong i love them anyway they vote for the wrong people i just don't understand but i love
them anyway i got relatives that do other stupid things and i love them anyway but they're not
renting my dadgum house either yeah and so i'm sorry i'm not trying to be tough on you but the
way sometimes that I can
put something that's been done to me in the rearview mirror is when I realize how much of
it I allowed to happen to me or I invited to happen to me. Therefore, I take responsibility
for the situation as much as the goobers. The goobers are just goobers. It's what they are.
And it's sad, but I mean, you you know they're not going to ever be anything
else the the day you're in a you're in a the dream world if you think they're going to walk
up at christmas and go you know i'm really sorry here's a two thousand dollar check for the back
rent and five thousand dollars for the damage and we really are so sorry we messed up the day that
the day that that happens i will turn blue it's not going to happen
yeah and they they haven't even had a job since they of course not one of them had a job for four
months and they're living in my in-laws basement now doing the exact same thing hey hold on here's
the deal you shouldn't even know where they live now you're keeping tabs on them they they they're
living they're still living rent free they just moved from their house to your head.
Let them go do their life, right?
Yeah.
And you and your wife decide, hey, it cost us $7,000 to get back here.
We learned a lesson.
You're looking for justice, and there is none.
Yeah, not going to have it anymore.
We're going to move on with our lives.
There's no justice.
There's no justice.
And maybe y'all don't do Christmas presents. That's fine that's a decision y'all would make i wouldn't
do it as retribution or like keep some sort of when they're 68 years old you can be like hey
y'all finally paid off the tab so here's a here's a christmas dish but we've been doing it at 250
we're just not gonna do it in 10 years or back even again are you is that work for y'all yeah
yeah it's it's i hate it for you man i i'm sorry you went through this but it was your
expectations and your lack of management that made the situation bizarre happen and made it worse
and so you know you could have limited the damage after you did it you could have stopped it from
ever happening if you just stood up and said uh no no of course not you can't
live in our house no you don't pay bills and you tear up stuff of course not no i mean we all have
relatives we all have friends that we love at a greater distance than living in our own home you
know you go over there somewhere and be you i shocked somebody the other day telling them two
of my closest friends on the planet my oldest friends who would lay down in traffic for me i wouldn't hire them they're terrible employees
they're amazing like long-term friends i would never hire them right and both of those things
can coexist i can love people but you can't live in my house yeah right exactly right so no that
lesson learned or or you can live in my house for a year and i'm not gonna lose sleep over if you put the word
family in front of dysfunctional it doesn't change dysfunctional it just magnifies it and so you know
that you got dysfunctional and then you got family dysfunctional which is like 10x and so all you did
was just ask for that to not existing
dysfunction was apparent to you and your wife. You ignored it and went ahead. Anyway, there's a
proverb says a wise man sees, sees trouble and turns a fool goes forward and suffers for it.
I have been a fool a time or two. That's why I'm so passionate about this. I see something I know
better. I go forward anyway, and I suffer for it. And that's exactly what happened to y'all.
And I'm so sorry. But good news is you never have to do it again. Listen to your brain. It's talking
to you. That puts this hour of the Ramsey Show in the books. We'll be back with you before you
know it. In the meantime, remember, there's ultimately only one way to financial peace,
and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace, Christ Jesus. Hey guys, I'm Rachel.
And I'm George.
And you've probably heard our voices before on The Ramsey Show.
And do we have a surprise for you.
Yep, we have our very own show, Smart Money Happy Hour, where we talk about pop culture, current
events, and of course, money.
George, it's a great show.
And what else do we talk about?
So much, Rachel.
Not enough.
And yet too much.
We talk about guilt tipping because tipping is out of control and I won't stand for it
anymore, which is why I'm sitting.
I'm glad you're taking such a stand.
And we also talk about something else I'm passionate about, Disney adults.
Oh, George.
Why is it a thing?
Listen, some adults still find the magic.
Sure.
We also talk about toxic money traits and girl math.
And if you don't know what those are,
you have to listen to the podcast.
Yeah, there's a lot there, you guys.
It's pretty fun.
We keep you relevant is what I'm trying to say.
We help you out.
So pull up a chair to the happy hour
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We promise you won't regret it. And if you don't have friends, we'll be your friends. We will. We're you out. So pull up a chair to the happy hour you wish your friends were having. We promise you won't regret it.
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