The Ramsey Show - This Is What It Sounds Like To Become a Millionaire in America
Episode Date: July 31, 2024📱Download your Ramsey Network App today! Dave Ramsey & Ken Coleman answer your questions and discuss: "How do I help my parents out of a financial mess?" "What's the best way to combine finances?..." "How do I recover after a gambling addiction?" "Are there pros to raising the minimum wage?" Baby Steps Millionaires Theme Hour. Support Our Sponsors: BetterHelp: https://www.betterhelp.com/Delony to get 10% off your first month The Wellness Company: urgentcarekit.com/ramsey for 15% off medical emergency kit Health Trust Financial: Discover Top Health Insurance Plans, All in One Place. Yrefy: Call 844-2-RAMSEY or go to Yrefy.com/Ramsey Zander Insurance: Go to zander.com or call 800-356-4282 for a fast and easy quote today. Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! ☎️ Share your thoughts on The Ramsey Show & more! 🚢 The Live Like No One Else Cruise is booking fast! 💼Join the Crusade! Apply Now! 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! 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.
Ken Coleman, number one bestselling author, Ramsey personality, host of The Ken Coleman Show,
where he does help people with their work and their careers.
He's my co-host today.
So we'll be talking to you about your life, and we talk about you right in front of you.
The phone number is 888-825-5225. The call is free
and some say the advice is worth exactly what you pay for it. So come hang out with us. We're here
for you, baby. This is how it works. Chris is in Boston to start this hour. Hey, Chris, welcome to
the Ramsey Show. Thank you, sir. How are you today? Better than I deserve. What's up in your world?
So I'm trying to figure out a way that I can set my parents up for financial wealth.
They're in a tough situation right now.
Okay.
What's their situation?
How old are they?
Well, so they have $300,000 mortgage, no other debt,
but they are way over the 25% they should be at.
It's at like almost 70% of their income is their mortgage payment.
How old are they?
And they're very much struggling to pay for everyday things.
Sure. Okay. How old are they?
Dad is 64. Mom is 62.
Okay. How did we get into this mess?
Did they quit their jobs, retire, and couldn't afford to?
No, just poor financial planning. of this mess did they quit their jobs retire and couldn't afford to no uh just uh you know
poor poor financial planning uh my dad's looking to retire in two years but they have no savings
and no retirement okay um well typically they don't want your advice it's the powdered butt
syndrome once someone has powdered your butt they don't really want your opinion on money or sex.
That's fair.
And so it's hard to talk to your parents unless they invite you into the conversation.
And that would usually say something like, hey, dad and mom, I've been doing this stuff. And you talk about you a lot.
And you talk about some of the dumb things you've done and some of the dumb things you stopped doing and the good results that you had.
And then mom or dad says something like, wow, that'd be good.
I wish I could do that.
Can I show you, please?
Can I show you?
Yeah.
You invite them to ask you in by talking about you, but going over there and wagging your
finger at them, it's probably not going to work with most moms and dads.
Would you agree? agree no of course yeah
so that makes you what 30 or 40 i am 33 sir yeah okay all right and so i mean you and i both know
they got to sell the house right that's actually that was the first thing i told them and they
they fought me tooth and nail for about three months. They just listed it two weeks ago.
Oh, good.
Okay.
So you are actually making headway.
I'm trying to, but I still feel like it's a long road ahead,
and I was just hoping to find some better advice.
Well, there's no hack.
I mean, you live on less than you make, and you save and invest some money.
That's the hack, right?
Of course.
And so we've got to get their housing where they can afford it
and then get them you know get on a budget and start stacking cash into their 401ks and so forth
what are their careers what are they doing my father works in the welding industry he is a
welder he's not a welder he he sells um the the gases and welding equipment for welders. All right.
And your mom does what?
She's retired.
She's on Social Security.
How old is she?
62.
Yeah.
She's unable to work.
Oh, okay.
Why?
She has a serious back condition.
Her back's all messed up.
Okay.
All right.
That's sad. Hopefully she could find something to do in spite of that,
that use your mind instead of your back type of a position, because what they desperately need
is an infusion of cash, and that comes from career, right? Correct yeah get that get the house down where they can
afford it you get just get a rental property or whatever and then let's see how fast we can stack
some cash yeah is she bedridden or is she completely immobilized or can she actually
no no she's able to walk around but you know doing a regular day-to-day job would be impossible for her. Not true. Not true at all. What did she do prior to the back
injury or retiring? She hasn't really worked in a long time. What did she do? Well, she was a
manager for a restaurant maybe 10 years ago. Fantastic. So she understands customer service,
yes? Yes. Absolutely. We live in a day and age where I think it'd be pretty darn easy
for your mom to get a job where she can do customer service. She does it from her own home.
Does not require any physical effort at all. It's not going to require her to do anything she's not
already doing in her normal life. Customer service role or some type of a phone role where she's
working for a company, she could probably make pretty good money per hour
and really help the cash infusion. That's an idea that you got to bring to the table. This idea that
she can't do anything is just completely false. Yeah, the good news is with the digital world
that we're in that there's a lot of options for folks. A lot of remote work. Obviously,
she's not going to carry a waitress tray around. get that absolutely um and i don't have any problem with that at all but yeah so all i want to do is get the income up the
out go down and that creates the space in between those two things called margin and we throw that
margin towards investments and we try to start building an s dig and you know you got 10 years
to do it uh if their health holds out if his health holds out. But he's not retiring in two years.
And they live on social insecurity with no money.
You're going to buy that cookbook, 74 Ways to Prepare Alpo.
That doesn't work.
The old dog food thing is gross.
It's a tough one, Chris.
But, yeah, if they follow everything you tell them which is
what you're going to be telling them what we would tell them here on the air is get on a budget
get your lifestyle down and stack cash with the money you create in the middle get your income up
um that's where it comes from it's it's there's not a hack there's not a short you know oh let's
go buy bitcoin no that doesn't work That just loses what little money you have.
So that's the kind of, you know, don't get desperate, in other words,
and fall for some con.
There's not a shortcut.
That's the hard part of this whole thing.
Open phones here at 888-825-5225.
Ken, the book you did, Find the Work You're Wired to Do,
it goes along with the assessment, the get clear assessment
to get clear on what you can do and what you're good at.
I think sometimes when we're pinched in a corner like that,
we don't, there's something about the stress of being put in a corner
that you don't see all the,
you don't do what Shuler used to call possibility thinking.
That's right.
Yeah, it's because you're panicked.
You've got a lot of fear and doubt, and it's really, really hard to replace that narrative.
That's why we call that assessment, by the way, the get clear assessment.
Here's what we've learned from studying psychology, and you look at successful people.
In times of confusion, in times of defeat, and you look at successful people, in times of
confusion, in times of defeat, whatever you want to label it, they retreat to clarity. They get
really, really clear, and what we teach is, if you can get clear on what you do best, this is just
raw talent or skill set that you've acquired, and if you can focus on that, you've got an opportunity,
no matter what your financial situation is, to leverage that, to use that talent to actually go make money.
That's just baseline.
And getting clear on, like in his mom's situation, that question is the right question.
Well, what has she done in the past?
Well, she was a manager of a restaurant.
Let me tell you something.
She can take great care of somebody on the telephone once she's trained and she understands the process.
And you know how many companies are looking for somebody that know how to talk to another human being?
I mean, she's got a real talent that is transferable to start making money right away.
She actually used to have face-to-face interaction with humans.
She didn't grow up with a text.
That's right.
Whoa, what a skill.
That's right.
Increasingly valuable skill in today's world.
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Have y'all noticed that real estate is weird right now? It's weird out there.
I mean, it's strange. If you're going to buy a house right now, if you're going to sell a house
right now, you don't really need to be screwing around with this unless you're dealing with
somebody that really knows what they're doing. Because it's a strange time and you need someone
to help you navigate that. If you're a buyer, that way you don't get ripped off and you don't
get pushed into some kind of weird thing. Or if you're a seller, you get the proper amount for the
property and the right kind of marketing advice from a pro who's actually done it before. Not
your uncle Henry who got his license three weeks ago and demands that you list your largest asset
with him. That's dumb. Don't do that. No, no. We're going to get like somebody that sells 30
to 300 houses a year. That's somebody who actually stays in the business when things are good. And
when things are bad, they know the market, they know how to navigate weirdness and they can help
you. We vet all of the agents that we put in the Ramsey trusted program. We coach them. They're
lined up with what we teach here. They understand what you're listening to this show,
that you're going to be calling with that mindset,
and they really are high-octane, high-protein, get-or-done people
with proven track records.
To find a Ramsey-trusted real estate agent for free,
just go to ramseysolutions.com slash agent.
Amit is with us in Greensboro, Northolina hi amit how are you i'm great
how are you guys better than we deserve what's up so uh i long story here but i was uh my background
technical background is engineering and science i did that for a few years i went to school for
it and everything but love basketball ended up switching careers, and I ended up coaching basketball,
first at the collegiate level, Division I,
and then into the NBA for the last two years.
The NBA is moving more and more towards hiring players.
Even with 10 years' experience in coaching at those levels,
I'm having a hard time finding jobs that are paying me enough to get by.
I'm married. I don't have any kids paying me enough to get by. I'm married.
I don't have any kids, but my wife makes exponentially more money than me.
So financially, we're okay.
We have no debt, nothing.
Homes paid off, cars are paid off.
So we're good there.
But I'm thinking now of transitioning into a different career.
I have no idea what to do.
And I've been so out of touch with what my degrees are in that I don't know if I could go back or if anybody would take it,
you know, bring me back there, if that makes sense.
It does make sense, but I want you to know that that's your fear and doubt
that's clouding your judgment.
And just somebody who's completely objective,
a former Division I basketball coach, a former NBA coach,
is a highly attractive bio and resume,
especially if you have some skill set that
will apply to what you're going for.
I'm just interested, what's your favorite part of coaching?
To me, it's about the relationships and the people I interact with every single day, whether
it's players or other coaches or executives, whatever, administrators, whatever it may
be.
It's a very people and relationship driven business.
And that to me is why I got into it in the first place.
I know the salaries are crazy right now, especially in the NBA.
Right.
But I never was about it for the money.
I was in it for experience.
Right.
Opportunity.
And just because it felt so satisfying and it still feels satisfying and I want to keep
doing it.
Right.
As long as I can.
Did you play?
Did you play college basketball at any level?
Did not.
Did not. You did not.
That's the crazy part.
No, it's not.
I'm 5'10", I'm Indian, and there are not a lot of people that look like me that do this.
Right.
Okay, you actually led me right into my question, and you're making my case for me.
You aren't in that position because of your X and O's knowledge and being a guru, a guy
who put up 25 points a game.
You're not in that role, and you haven't gotten into that role based on that.
Is that true or false?
My success is all from work and relationships.
That's it.
I don't have the 15-year NBA career that some of these guys have.
Exactly.
And you have managed to get to the highest level of a sport the nba as a 5 foot 10 indian i mean you really
are an absolute freak in a good way okay and it's all based on your skill set of connecting with
others can i just tell you something and dave can chime in here, he's a guy that is the founder and active CEO of a company of over a thousand people, and he hosts one of the largest, most influential leadership podcasts in the world.
We talk about leadership all the time.
America needs leaders. day and companies need people who can lead people, who know how to connect with people,
who know how to communicate with people, who know how to instruct people, who know how to encourage
people. Amit, you got an incredible resume. Oh, and an engineering degree. So if I'm you,
I'm going, I'm going to start with, let me take that degree of engineering and I'm going to look
at the engineering field. I'm not going to limit myself to engineering, but I'm going to start there because I got the degree.
And then I'm going to start working my connections.
By the way, I'm going to give you my book, The Proximity Principle,
which for a guy like you who's a learner, it's going to give you the absolute formula,
the five people you need to be around that will help you get where you want to go.
And by the way, you have an unbelievable network.
And so all those
coaches who know business guys, your college connections with all these business guys who
used to donate money big time, they were hanging around those D1 programs. Those are your connections.
And you go, look, I got an engineering degree. I can get in the engineering field and lead people
today. I may not be the most talented engineer, which by the way, Amit, tell me if I'm right or wrong. The guys and gals that are leading teams of engineers are rarely
the most talented engineer. True or false? I wouldn't know. I've been removed from it for
so long that I don't remember. All right, I'll tell you the answer. The answer is leading engineers,
you don't have to be the smartest, Dave, talented engineer you just got to know how to lead people and this guy he's bona fide that's my take and he's he's going for management
and leadership positions across the spectrum of the business world I think you can go just about
anywhere because it's not about the trade and it's not about the industry it's about his ability to
come in and bring a team together that's my that's my two cents on that one exactly right the you
know what we teach when we're teaching entree leadership to business people is
what happens a lot of times in small businesses, people become accidental entrepreneurs. Uh, you
know, I'm really good at heating and air and I get me a truck and then I look up and I got 40 people
and 10 trucks running around. Now I'm no longer, uh, now I'm no longer a heating and air technician.
Now I'm a leader.
That's right.
And leading and running a business is a different skill set than fixing your air conditioner.
And leading and running people is a different skill set than playing basketball or being
an engineer.
The leadership skill set you excel in.
That's right.
And so you do have a great resume in that sense.
Now, the trick is, where do you want to plug it in? What type of a business, what kind of dynamic
environment do you want to be in where you're leading and then finding people through your
connections with proximity principles to plug into one of those locations would be, you know,
just be amazing.
Yeah. I mean, he can absolutely make this transition and do very, very well because
what he has going for him that a lot of NBA coaches don't have if they leave the, that industry is,
he's got a really good degree. That engineering degree is very helpful. Meaning he's got that
skillset. He's got the mindset to think like an engineer. You add the leadership to it.
Unbelievable. Absolutely. It's exactly how it works. So hang on. We'll have Christian pick up
and we will get you signed up for that. Send out that book to you, Amit. So, Ken, the proximity
principle, give us the thesis of that. It just simply means this. If I am around the people and in the places
of the space that I want to be in, then opportunities come my way. And so the formula
is this. The right people plus the right places always will equal opportunity. I got to get around
the right people, and then I get in the right places. And when I'm in the right places, I meet
more of the right people, and then they point me to the right places. And when I'm in the right places, I meet more of the right people. And then they point me to the right places.
And it is this knowledge and connection combination that just keeps moving, moving, moving, moving, moving.
And if you stay with it long enough, opportunities show up on your doorstep.
This idea of kicking the door down is Hollywood bravado.
It makes for great fantasy. But in the real world, connections come at the most unexpected times
because we keep showing up in the right place
or we keep showing up around the right people.
And all of a sudden, I'm top of mind
or I've got the experience
and I was showing up
and then boom, I'm ready to step into it.
Speaking of basketball,
John Wooden,
arguably one of the greatest coaches of all time,
certainly basketball. My favorite quote, Dave. He said, when opportunity comes, arguably one of the greatest coaches all time, certainly basketball.
My favorite quote, Dave, he said,
when opportunity comes, it's too late to prepare.
And the proximity principle gets me in a place when the opportunity shows up,
I'm ready to step right into it because I kept putting myself around the right people
and in the right places.
This is The Ramsey Show.
You know my philosophy on planning and preparing.
Being proactive is always better than being reactive.
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slash Ramsey. In the lobby of Ramsey Solutions on the debt-free stage, Nathan and Brittany are with us.
Hey, guys, how are you?
Doing well.
How are you doing?
Better than we deserve.
Where do you guys live?
Chattanooga.
All right, just down the road.
Well, welcome to Nashville.
And how much debt have you two paid off?
$73,545.
Excellent.
And how long did that take?
About 14 months.
Good for you.
And your range of income during that time?
$80,000 to about $100,000.
Cool.
What do y'all do for a living?
I'm a first grade teacher.
And I'm a mental health therapist and I direct a college counseling center for a local college.
Oh, excellent.
Very good.
So what kind of debt was the $74,000?
It was taxes.
It was a car, credit cards.
And I had student loans.
Student loans.
Yeah.
Y'all were kind of normal.
Yeah, very normal.
Yeah, normal sucks, yeah.
It did.
So what happened 14 months ago?
What was your wake-up call?
What was your something's got to change moment?
Yeah, well, we went through Financial Peace University
whenever we got married five years ago.
And we were Ramsey-ish
for about three and a half years and paid off only $30,000 of debt.
So you flunked.
Yes, very much so. And then 14 months ago, we owed in taxes for the first time and had to get
new tires on our car within a couple of days of each other. And we both felt like we got punched
because we had a bunch of bills, we had student loans, loans credit cards and now we had to get new tires
and pay the irs which is a scary feeling it's interesting that owing the irs suddenly like that
is like 100x more uh drama than owing the exact same amount to a credit card company yes it was
scary they're just like
that yeah and and with good reason because they're scary people but yeah but wow that does there is
something puts a lump in your throat a knot in the stomach and you gotta okay this has got to stop
we got to get that old financial peace book back out this time we're doing it yeah exactly is that
what it sounded like yeah i mean yeah mean, I started working at my school.
We have an opportunity to work the late stay program.
And so I started working from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day.
He started door dashing.
He started teaching classes.
Yeah.
So we-
Any extra that we could do, we were trying to do.
We cut up our credit cards.
Yeah.
The whole nine yards.
Yeah.
It got very serious.
Yeah.
Got on a budget.
Yeah. Well, we were on a budget, but we started actually following the budget oh yeah actually doing it yeah exactly yeah see here's
what i want people to hear you knew the plan you said you were ish and then you go from ish to
like that r that ramsey was like right it's a it's a guttural kind of a sound
so what were beyond working hard what were some of the communication changes
in order to actually finally go, we're doing this thing? Yeah, we had to quit making excuses. And,
you know, our date nights look a lot different. Friday nights, we were having cheap pizza,
watching smart money, happy hour at home, you know, I um yeah the communication we began to more just
breathe and communicate ramsey yeah and we communicated about everything like people in
our lives would be like you're talking about buying gum but it'd be like no we're communicating
about everything saying this is where our budget's going is it okay that we put this in the miscellaneous
category because it came up unexpectedly yeah we just communicated about every little thing yeah that's awesome yeah
glad the wake-up call was something small yeah knock out yeah that the why so your your core
reason was to get away from that fear that's what drove you that that moment you know i don't ever
want to feel like this again yeah and to
change our generation that comes after us we know that's the more noble step once you get past the
fear you're like okay we're gonna change the family tree yeah we never want our kids to
experience that right the fear motivated us but then also i mean we're both christians and so
once we began getting on that that path like it wasn't easy it felt like spiritual warfare at
times like things kept on coming up, coming up, coming up.
But we realized we also want to use our finances to honor God and steward what we've been given
well.
Yeah.
Good for you guys.
Well done.
Well done.
What do you tell people the key to getting out of debt is?
Well, other than getting to Brittany in their life, because I could take an hour and talk
about how incredible that she is.
But other,
other than that,
cause I've got her and that's my,
my step.
But,
but I would say,
no,
you're why just,
I mean,
tying it back into that.
And for ours was for giving praise to the Lord Jesus.
Yeah.
And intentionality,
because as we said,
it took us three and a half years to pay off 30,000.
And then we paid off 73,000 in 14
months and it's just funny how we had so many people tell us on while we were on this journey
oh I just wish we could do that I wish we could do that yeah it's like well you can't all you have
to do is make the hard choices because it is hard it's not an easy thing it was the hardest season
we've had so far yeah but the intentionality is what changed it and if we can do it anyone can yeah deloney says choose your hard i mean it's hard to owe the irs money
and not be able to put your tires on your car that's hard but there's also the heart of i'm
going to sacrifice so i don't ever have to face that again that's that's a better hard to choose
yeah choose that one and that's the one you chose the second time. Good job, y'all. Well done. Very, very, very well done.
So what was the hardest part?
What was the biggest fight you had
while you were doing this 14 months?
The hardest part was just making sure
that we were both serious at the same time
because it is hard
and it's really nice to do this with somebody
to keep you accountable.
And so when I would say I think we should use the budget for this or he should we he would say that we should
use the budget for this we it was just hard sometimes getting on the same page and it was
really easy to have one person say well why not for this oh also no spend months are hard. Those are really, really hard. Um, and so just
making sure we would get on the same page. Yeah. And I'm, you know, Rachel Cruz talks about like,
I'm a spontaneous giver. She says that in her book, know yourself, know your money.
And for me, I had to be like, no, I can't give right. I mean, we gave to our church,
obviously that was our plan to giving. But for me, I had to keep that like long distant go of
like, I want to be able to live and give like no one else yeah yeah so right now i'm gonna not do the spontaneous right yeah
everything's got to be dialed into a plan for a period of time here with this intensity yeah
right well done you guys proud of y'all thank you who was cheering you on we had a lot of good
cheerleaders in our life but our main ones are here today we have my parents as
i said my dad he had us do financial peace university whenever we first got married and
then my mom she is an avid couponer and so we haven't paid for toiletries or anything like that
because of her and then also there were some times that we'd come home from work and our fridge would
be full of groceries because she was just being a great blessing and then my best friend megan is
here and she has just been the ultimate cheerleader like every little thing she'd be like
you paid off 50 yeah that's awesome just cheering every little step along the way so just truly done
a great cheerleader very cool yeah good job you guys surround yourself with people that love you
and support you and that instead a bunch of debbie downers around you that's very smart very smart
well done good stuff good stuff poor debbie and poor karen they've just gotten messed over and that instead of a bunch of Debbie Downers around you. That's very smart. Very smart. Well done.
Good stuff.
Good stuff.
Poor Debbie and poor Karen.
They've just gotten messed over, haven't they? Yes, absolutely.
Oh, my gosh.
Wow.
Way to go, you two.
Very, very cool.
Good stuff.
Nathan and Brittany from Chattanooga, $74,000 paid off in 14 months,
making $80,000 to $100,000.
Count it down. Let's hear a debt-free scream three two one we're dead free
that is how it's done wow ken if we can ever solve the formula to get people to be intense automatically
while they're in the class sometimes they are sometimes they're not but if we can solve that
formula and not have that three and a half year gap of ish before something has to come along
punch you in the gut to get you awake, we will have hit a milestone.
That will be huge.
Because the number of people, the number of you listening out there right now, you listen
to this stuff, but you don't do it.
Yeah.
And here's the thing.
I'm just sitting here watching this.
And those of you that are listening, you could hear it in Nathan.
Nathan's this very nice, soft-spoken young man.
And he just let it rip.
And what's fun about watching that, and there's no judging whether you're louder
than the next-deck free-screamer, but there's something emotional there.
And to your point, Dave, if you can figure out how good it's going to feel
in that class, and you see what it feels like,
that's the idea is bottling that and going,
why would I want to delay that?
I want to get through this now and experience what's on the other side of it.
Yeah.
Fantastic.
Step away from the ish.
Right.
That's right.
Don't do the ish.
Back away.
Don't do the ish.
Don't do it.
Just cannonball.
Don't do it.
This is the Ramsey Show.
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and we know you're doing it because we're seeing the numbers are incredible. If you subscribe to the show on the platform that you're doing or follow the show on the platform that you're listening or watching,
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It makes a big difference.
Also, share the show.
Some of these things have a share button
where you can share it maybe you're just listening on talk radio tell people where you're listening
you know i'm in phoenix i listen on ktar you know and and the ramsey shows on there has changed my
life tell people tell people when you read a good book tell people when you see a good movie
um tell people when you hear a good show a good podcast a good youtube show whatever it is spread the word and we know you're doing it because the our numbers are are up uh astronomically and
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forward in front of people that don't even know they're searching for it and uh so it it changes
everything when you do that guys it's a big deal thank you very very much even the five-star
reviews those help a bunch too thank you william is with us in providence rhode island hi william
how are you hey guys i'm great thanks for uh taking my call i appreciate it sure how can we help
so i'm in the military um and I just got married two months ago.
Congratulations.
I discovered you all about four months ago.
Thanks, man.
I appreciate it.
I discovered you guys four months ago.
Life has been excellent.
So we're in the process of moving, and we're paying off my wife's student loan debt, about $28,000.
And we figured out we're going to be moving
to Hawaii in March. Um, looking at housing prices over there, it's going to be pretty insane,
at least to do like first month's rent, security deposit, everything like that.
So I'm looking at your advice on how to approach that, taking a pause at baby step two
and how to move forward there. It's not really a pause on baby step two it's just a pause
on the whole thing because you've got a uh you know something staring you're staring
you know you're staring at this thing in front of you and you've got to deal with it right
and so you know what i would do is put a detailed number on the march move
stop everything and pile up that number because it's coming
it's not if it's just oh yeah it's not there's no question about the probability of it
and so and then when you've got that number then push play set that number to the side push play
and then start working it again okay yeah that's exactly how you do it. So which branch are you in?
I'm in the Navy.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, thank you for your service, sir.
We appreciate you guys.
Well, I appreciate you guys.
And how old are you two?
28, and my wife is 26.
Perfect.
Yeah. Okay.
Have you been through Financial Peace University yet?
No, sir.
We've been just kind of listening to the show and making a go at it
we're going to give that to you as a belated wedding gift two months into my wedding i wish
two months into my marriage i wish somebody had shown me this stuff my life would have been
completely different in a good way so yeah and i got a pretty good life but yeah so anyway hang
on christian's going to pick up.
We'll get you signed up for Financial Peace University because Hawaii is expensive.
You need to –
And that's the truth.
Dave, I've got to ask a quick question because this is – I'm curious to know your take on this.
If I was in this situation, and he's in the military, so he may not be able to do anything outside of his military service.
But if his wife is not working outside of the home, or even if she is, I'm the kind of guy that if I were in that position in the baby steps, certainly in baby step two,
and I had an expense like that that was coming, and we knew it was going to be a chunk. So let's
just say it was, I'll make this up for example purposes, I had to come up with $5,000 for
something in March. I'm the kind of guy that's going to go crazy trying to make extra money and fund that 5,000 above and beyond what
I'm doing out of my normal budget towards the baby steps do you do you does that bother you
is that's an okay thing the thing is it works exactly the same way if you just push stop that's
true and then go crazy right pile it up that much But I'm the guy who hates losing the progress.
But if you pile it up twice as fast, because you're not staying in play mode, you push pause, then you're back at it.
And mathematically, you'll end up in about the same place.
But you're right.
It does light a fire under you to get it done quick.
Jack is in Los Angeles.
Hey, Jack, how are you?
I'm good.
How are you doing?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
My fiance and I are both 25 years old.
We're getting married two months from now.
And we're, of course, looking to combine finances.
Not sure the best way to go about it on a couple fronts. One,
should we be waiting until we're married? Two, we both do have credit cards. We both,
as of last month, are debt-free, but we're wondering, should we be keeping them? Should
we get rid of them? We're worried about canceling them, impacting our credit scores as we look to buy a house. So hoping to get your advice on all of that.
Okay.
You don't combine finances until you're married.
Okay.
And after you're married, then, yes, you combine them because the preacher will say, and now you are one.
And that's what that means.
Until then, you've got all kinds of issues when you combine things that can happen um if if something terrible happened before the wedding you get it you get yourself into a mess
so we just wait until then as far as keeping your credit cards open um the best thing i know to do
is cut them up and close everything and have zero balances. And if you have no active accounts going,
it takes about six months for your credit score to just disappear.
What you don't want is a medium credit score.
You either want a very high one or a no credit score
when you're going for a mortgage.
No credit score sets you up for manual underwriting
with someone like Churchill Mortgage Hour,
the team that we've endorsed for mortgages for almost 30 years now, and they can help
you do a manual underwriting with zero credit score.
But you don't want to be in no man's land in the middle, and that's what will happen
if you keep a bunch of stuff open with zero balances, because FICO's algorithm is built to where it wants you to be in debt.
To drive an 800 credit score, you have to get in debt and stay in debt and pay it regularly.
I pay my credit cards off every month or I don't use them at all.
And they're open, will damage your credit score.
So will closing them, will damage your credit score. So will closing them will damage your credit score.
But closing them is the path to get to zero.
And that's where I would recommend you go is to zero.
And it's okay to not buy a house immediately, by the way.
It's going to take about six months for this to happen.
So six months from the time you're married,
you both close all accounts.
You have zero balances, zero activity of any kind on anything that's reporting to FICO you will disappear you'll fall off the grid which
is what you're trying to do here and um you know that's the goal and we recommend in general young
couples getting married that they wait a year to buy a house. It takes about a year of marriage to know how close to your mother-in-law to buy. You got to get to know each other. Okay. And you, you know,
you've been married 20 minutes. You're going to buy a different house then than you will when
you've been married 20 months. Um, it's a different, it's a different property you're
going to sign up for. And so you just, you know, just take your time. You got, you got the rest of
your life. You're going to be okay.
I don't want you to take 10 years, but you can take a few months.
And during that time, you have the opportunity for the credit score to go away.
Yeah, you know, I'm thinking back to when Stacey and I got married and this whole question,
and we were walking through premarital counseling.
Both of our dads were pastors, and so they were, you know, really driving home the point that you made, keep everything separate, separate, of course. But it was us trying to
clean everything up. And Stacey had some debt and we worked really hard to help her. And she,
she went after it and to enter into marriage with, and we had a little debt. I had a little
bit of student loans left and she had a little bit left and then we knocked them out in that first couple of years. But it was such a big deal for us to, in the first 12 months,
just learn how each other handled money. You know what I mean? How you handle life. There's that too.
But it's like to make a big purchase decision like that and strap yourself into a mortgage like that
without kind of, as you said, experiencing marriage in the way
we viewed money. That first 12 months for us was really eye-opening, and we had to learn how to get
on the same page. Yeah, it was for my wife, Sharon. She realized she'd made a huge mistake.
Well, Stacey as well. Poor woman. They have the patience of Joe.
Thought she married Sir Galahad. Turns out it was Goober.
Right. I resemble that.
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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.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host, Ken Coleman, Ramsey personality,
number one bestselling author and host of The Ken Coleman Show,
a great podcast on the Ramsey Network.
He's my co-host today.
Open phones here, 888-825-5225.
Rashaun is with us in Richmond, Virginia.
Hi, Rashaun, how are you?
Hey, how you doing, guys?
How you doing?
Better than I deserve, sir.
How can I help?
So I'm kind of in a little dilemma to where I feel like I've wasted 10 years of my life.
How?
So long story short, coming out of high school i didn't know exactly what i wanted
to do with my life and um you know i scrambled i went from nursing land care uh being an entrepreneur
i did a whole bunch of things and uh found myself in trucking, I've been in trucking for about four years.
And throughout me trying to figure myself out and going back and forth through college, online courses, and things of that nature,
I've tackled on a little bit of debt, which is minuscule compared to others.
But I also got into a couple of vices of drinking and smoking.
And I guess the biggest one would be gambling.
I have two sons and a daughter, and I recently popped the question.
So now I'm on my last year in my 20s.
I turned 30 in November.
And now just kind of reminiscing of what went wrong and how many years and days, months, and seconds have I really wasted of just not figuring out life.
I don't have a savings.
I don't have, if it wasn't for my current employer, I wouldn't even have health insurance.
No 401k, no big plans.
Most of my life has been basically paycheck to paycheck just surviving um i'm not a
great place yeah i would say so my dad told me growing up 90 of solving a problem is realizing
there is one right and i just and and i realized that and i've i've listened to you uh listen to
you guys for a while now i just never really had the courage to really call uh but speaking to my
fiancee you know she she said it'd be a good idea don't be scared you know that and from what i've
heard um from what i'm here what i've heard from you guys in the past especially giving other people
advice you guys are very blunt and i i feel like that's needed um so i I've just kind of just wondering where should I start?
Okay.
So I heard, I heard four things that you described as problems, smoking, drinking, gambling, and
not sticking with a career track.
Did I hear that right?
Right.
Okay. that right right okay if those are the four problems what is causing that get down under
what the cause of those things and i bet it's the same thing as causing all three of them
um it could be simple immaturity uh it could be you know you got demons from your childhood
chasing you or something i don't know know. Not literal demons, but possibly.
But I mean, okay, because I mean, the obvious answer is it's almost like a joke.
You know, Bob Newhart just passed away, but he had a famous routine that he did as a psychiatrist.
He wasn't a psychiatrist.
He played one on TV.
But, you know, people would come in and tell him their problems and he would just yell stop it you know just stop it
yeah and then that'll be five dollars you know stop it that'll be five dollars and so it's kind
of it's kind of like where you are right i mean it's like okay the gambling the drinking are you
have you stopped it i have i have. I'll be honest.
That was a no.
Yeah.
I haven't.
I have stopped.
I forcibly stopped myself from gambling.
I self-exempt myself and myself within Virginia State.
So for about five years, of that five years, it's been, I want to say, close to three.
I haven't smoked in about a
good uh almost nearly a year and my last drink was probably last weekend okay and so then i guess the
other thing you think about is who are you running around with that was caught that that was thinking
that this is a good idea and you're not running around with them anymore because you know you
become who you hang around with that's right that's true ray sean ray sean i'm gonna be real blunt with you because
you opened up the door and usually dave does all the blunt but i'm gonna tell you something
you have been trying to escape a life that you don't enjoy and you need to start building today
a life that you don't need to escape from. Gambling is a rush. It is trying to discover
what it feels like to be enthralled. A win to win. That's right. And I think it's building a life.
And I know I'm the work guy at Ramsey, but the research backs me up. This is not my opinion.
When a human being does something in their day that is meaningful, then they don't need to escape from life. The
reward is knowing that you are doing something that matters to you because it matters to someone
else. So from a work standpoint, we're going to give you some tools, by the way, because there's
a lot to cover here. But I want to give you the Get Clear Assessment in the book, Find the Work
You're Wired to Do, because it's going to really help you. And then we could also set up a call for you to come on
my show where we can go a little bit deeper here. But my friend, what is ailing you is that Dave's
right. There's something in your soul that is longing for meaning and purpose, or there's this
vision you had of your life that maybe you don't think is possible,
and a lot of fear and doubt along this way, these 10 years in your 20s, you've gotten to a point
where you didn't think it was possible. And so to medicate, you medicated through alcohol,
and you medicated through nicotine, and you've medicated through gambling. And I think Dave's
right. Stop it's you don't
need to be sad you need to be mad and i think a good healthy sense of self-anger to say as dave
you said it on the stage i'll hand it to you it's the most powerful thing i've ever heard you say
and i've seen you say it i feel like i've seen you say it a thousand times but it's where you
get to a point where you're sick and tired of being sick and tired and he's at a great place
yeah you gotta say i've had it i've had not living like this anymore and it's with you get to a point where you're sick and tired of being sick and tired, and he's at a great place. Yeah, you've got to say, I've had it.
I've had it.
I'm not living like this anymore.
And it's with fervor.
And the good news is that you're doing some real manly, masculine things.
Absolutely.
You're taking ownership of this stuff.
You're engaged.
You're going to be a dad.
You're actually going to show up and be a dad, not just father children.
There's a difference.
That's right.
You're entering into all of these things.
And so what would you do?
What, you know, what, what's the course on how to do life, right.
That you'd sign up for.
Well, I'd get plugged in with some men that are who I want to be when I grow up.
Oh, that's true.
And I, and I would, you know, get a group of guys that I hang out with all the time.
Cause you do become who you hang around with.
So true.
As a matter of fact, folks, the research says that your income over a 10-year period of time will be within 15
percent of the average of your 10 closest friends income that's right some of you're going i need
some new friends well you might okay it's okay so um that's you know and so in my case what
happened with me ray sean was uh i i got plugged into a good church because i met god
and i met other men that were trying to be men be good dads good husbands and i started learning
from them and so i was hanging out with people had the same aspirational goals that i had from
a spiritual emotional relational financial everything and and instead of just hanging
out my drinking buddies.
It's a different group of people, I can tell you that.
And so that's how I did it.
And that's what we'll plug you into a bunch of Ken's materials, though.
Hold on, Christian will pick up.
We'll get you some of his stuff.
They get clear assessment with the Find the Work You're Wired to Do book,
and the whole thing will help you with all of it.
You're a good man.
You've got a good heart.
This is The Ramsey Show.
You know, it doesn't take a degree in statistics to realize this one stinks.
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Ken Coleman, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today. Our question of the day comes from Kevin
in Georgia. Kevin asks, with the presidential election coming up, I have been doing research on who to vote for.
Sorry, I can only laugh at that. Some politicians want to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour.
What are the pros and cons of this? My thought is that it means products and services will go up in price and everyone will be right back to the same financial spot they were in before the
increase. Okay, this is one of my favorite things to talk about. This is Economics 101. And Dave, I talk about this some on my show,
and it's hysterical to see people just come at me with the vitriol and the hate over basic
economics as though I came up with it. But it's very simple. When a minimum wage is raised,
it puts financial pressure on the economy in a negative way. But the bleeding hearts and
people who don't understand basic economics go, well, this is great. Well, they think Santa Claus
is providing the money. Right. But the reality is, is that those... The customer pays for it.
Well, yeah, the grocery store, the fast food place passes on the increased cost of your combo meal.
And so you gripe about inflation,
and yet you celebrate federal minimum wage ideas. Now, let me just address that.
This is nothing more than a political football. Because 1.1 percent of Americans are on the
minimum wage. That's exactly right. One freaking percent. Right. And if you look at what happened
during COVID, there was societal pressure on this. And
we saw a couple of big stores, namely Walmart and Target, raise their minimum wage voluntarily. And
a lot of companies followed suit and then came. We went from $10 to $15 to $20 in about 18 months.
And then you saw the great resignation as a result of that, and now very stubborn inflation. So if you want to know how it actually works, pay attention to how inflation rose from 2020
to the end of 2022.
So it's not arguable.
You can't debate it.
You know, you can chase your tail if you want to.
It's mathematic.
But it just, it is.
It's math.
When the person putting the bread on the shelf at the grocery store makes $20 instead of $10, that cost of that bread has
to go up or the grocery store loses money and goes out of business.
And the cost of the bread goes up.
And so you buying the bread pay more.
The cost of the eggs go up when the person handling the eggs is paid more it's very simple it's uh because it's like
we're going to raise taxes on corporations no you're not corporations don't pay taxes
they pass the cost of the tax through to the buyer of their goods and services their customers pay
the taxes they're built into your product. So if you raise
taxes on corporations, you raise prices on the people that are doing it. It's economics. It's
not liberalism or conservatism. It's just freaking math. If you run a business, you have to charge
more than it costs you. Which, by the way, Dave, let's point this out because we have a very large
audience, all political spectrums. Make sure you hear this. If you're somebody right now, and there's a lot
of Americans, three out of five Americans, new data just came out, believe we're in a recession,
which we are not by the actual definition of it. But it's inflation that's making people feel this
way. Hear this. When you hear certain people on the left say, we're going to raise taxes on small
business and we're going to raise taxes on small business
and we're going to raise taxes on the corporation, what you don't understand is the opposite
of that policy to cut taxes on small business, to cut taxes on big business, means that the
cost of everything in your life will go down, which means you keep more of your paycheck
if you're disciplined.
It's really important that people understand this stuff because it gets politicized and you don't look at the math. You think it's a one and done,
but all it is is a chain reaction. You're pushing a domino when you raise the cost of something in
business. That's right. You're pushing a domino and then the next thing down costs more. So
here's an example, okay? If gas is $5 a gallon instead of $2.50 a gallon,
the truck delivering the stuff to the store has to pay twice as much in fuel cost.
So they're going to charge more to deliver the stuff to the store.
So the store is going to charge you more when you buy that loaf of bread that came off the bread
truck it is a domino there's dominoes going all the way down the line here and so you are paying
for the truck driver's higher fuel bill when you buy stuff that that truck carries by definition
you don't have a choice and it's not a you, you know, you can not like that or like that.
Well, that's evil.
It's capitalism.
Well, try communism.
Have you visited those countries?
Yeah.
They have a line to get the bread.
The bread sucks.
You can't get it.
There's a shortage because they don't produce goods and services.
And so these are what, you know, people who love communism are people who have not traveled.
Okay. Go to the country.
I've traveled all over the world about the only thing I'm sure of is I'm always happy when I get
back to America. Okay. Uh, and you can dislike some of the stuff that goes on in America. We're
not perfect. I don't have that, but I got to tell you, man, there's very few places in the world.
You're going to have this quality of life and it is this freaking system that gave you this quality of life so that's your minimum wage answer oh by the way
one percent of americans are on minimum wage so if you raise the minimum wage it does absolutely
nothing so it's political bullcrap is what it is the only other people that are affected are
some of the union contracts are indexed off of minimum wage. So whatever minimum wage does, the union contract gets the same bump.
So it does affect actually more than the 1%, but it's still a minuscule thing.
It's absolute political bullcrap.
What does drive the cost of entry-level work up is a supply-demand issue.
That's what we ran into a covet there was a shortage of workers and these
stores were having to pay people more money to come to work and so that's the only way they could
get them was to pay them more that is a free market pressure to drive wages up not a regulated
pressure there's a difference and so in either case though the twenty dollar person
versus the ten dollar person putting something on the shelf is built into the cost of whatever
they put in the shelf whether it's driven by the rise of minimum wage which it probably doesn't
affect that almost every grocery store is paying more than minimum wage almost every restaurant's
paying more than minimum wage they can't attract workers right now unless they do. Targets, Walmarts, everybody.
By the way, that's an absolute fact.
Amazon, everybody.
None of these people are working for seven and a quarter.
That's right.
They're all paying above the actual federal minimum wage.
It is a default price.
So you could move the minimum wage, and it wouldn't change those people's pay one dime.
That's correct.
One dime.
Doesn't change a thing.
So it's political bullcrap we're for the working man we're trying to help the little man oh bullcrap you haven't tried to
help the little man in decades either one of you if you did you cut your own pay and balance your
budget quit spending some dadgum much if you want to help the little man you cut taxes on the little
man if you actually cared about the little man both of you you r's and d's sicken me that's right
you just the crap we're for small business you haven't done anything for small business in
decades except tax our assumptions off i mean it's absolutely crazy while we're at it uh if both
parties cared about the average american and their income and their children's
children's opportunity we'd have a balanced budget amendment it'd be a single issue balance the
federal budget states all across this country have a constitutional requirement to actually
balance their state budgets and we don't have a and we're now 35 trillion dollars in national debt
and i think it's the issue.
No one's talking about it.
And we, the people, it's not going to, we just walk around going, well, they'll figure
it out.
No, they won't.
And so, you know, anyway, that's, they don't really care.
All of this is politics.
All of it.
It's all perception.
It's all emotion.
And, you know, and this idea that somehow you're going to uh straight you know you're going to ruin the
economy so that you can ruin america it's a bad plan y'all it's a bad plan because you can't have
this good a life anywhere else anywhere else in the world the best shot at going from poverty
to wealth in the history of the world statistically is to be born in america right now in poverty
versus being born anywhere else in poverty communism does not lift people out of poverty
socialism doesn't lift people out of poverty margaret thatcher said it best
so the problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money
venezuela in the news today. Today. Today.
This is the Ramsey Show. I've been doing this show for over 30 years and some of the saddest
calls I have taken are from situations that are completely preventable. Yeah and what's so hard
is I feel like one of those especially the ones ones that I'm like, oh, it's terrible.
People that call in and their spouse has passed away suddenly
and they don't have life insurance.
When you have to think through how am I going to pay my bills?
How am I going to eat next week?
Yeah, in the middle of all that grief.
It's just, it is, it's terrible.
So life insurance is the one thing,
especially as a mom with three little kids
that I'm like so big on for people to get
because it's inexpensive.
Zander is the place that Winston and I actually get all of our life insurance. And it doesn't cost much because
Zander shops among a gazillion different companies. It doesn't cost much. You just have to admit that
someday you're not going to be here. You got to say it out loud and you got to say, I'm going to
say I love you to my family by taking care of them and taking the time to put this stuff in
place. The cost of stinking pizza. To get a free quote, call 800-356-4282 free quote call 800-356-4282 that's 800-356-4282
or go to zander.com ken coleman ramsey personality is my co-host today thanks for hanging out with
us america luke is in maryland hi luke welcome to the Show. Hi, how are you guys doing? Better than I deserve. What's up?
So just a bit of background. I'm 19. I'll be a sophomore in college this fall.
Graciously, through 529, the first two years of college will be paid for.
However, my second two years of college will not be.
Even with me living off campus those last two years and paying for my own groceries and stuff,
I'll still need about $48,000 to complete college and get my degree.
As of now, the option in front of me is student debt, but I've been listening to you for a while,
and I'm very anxious to do that.
I currently do not have any debt.
I have a paid-off car, very reliable.
I have no credit cards.
I have no other debt.
However, I recently just got in contact with a recruiter through my school for the Army National Guard.
And through the six-year contract, I would be able to have, once I'm completed basic training and schooling for the job,
I would be able to leave college without any debt.
And I would be able to have a nice little chunk of change around 17 000
maybe more um leaving college in my bank account that i can just start my life yeah so um but the
national guard has a phenomenal program for students in your situation what you're what you
what you stumbled into there was a gold mine yes uh it's an excellent excellent program and it's not going to be bad for you as a man at
all to go through the whole process um and so uh i can't yes absolutely hands down go do that so
the last time i looked at it we endorsed them for a while because they had like a
like ten thousand dollars cash at sign like a signing bonus that went towards tuition immediately.
Is that,
it must be more than that now with what numbers you just gave me.
So,
um,
in more detail,
uh,
basically I'd get a $7,500 signing bonus by sign between October 1st and May
15th.
Um,
that would be given to me,
um,
after I finished my job schooling,
um,
I would get $4,000 immediately as federal tuition assistance per year.
Per year.
And it maxes out.
Yeah.
So you got $7,500 plus $8,000 there.
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
And then I get $20,000 per year for state tuition assistance after I've completed my basic training and job schooling.
That was right now,
if I'm trying to get the best or max out the benefits, I would need to,
um,
basically slightly defer my spring semester this year of college.
Um,
and then that way I can do my basic training and schooling,
um,
without missing any more college.
That's kind of my only holdup.
I've been talking to my,
um,
college counselor.
And as long as I take one online class, I can still be enrolled in my college. That's kind of my only holdup. I've been talking to my college counselor, and as long as I
take one online class, I can still be enrolled in my college, so that should not be an issue.
Perfect. Do that. I hate the word defer there. I understand how they're using it,
but this is the no-brainer for you to do the one class, stay eligible, and come out debt-free.
Yeah, you're going to be 25 years old and have served in the National Guard and have come out of college completely debt-free.
Okay, great. Thank you, guys.
We've worked with these guys for years.
I think the numbers change from state to state, if I recall, in terms of how much assistance they give and different things.
But the package they're offering you is solid.
I mean, you're looking at it and you're going, this looks good you you're kind of almost like it's too
good you're kind of worried right yes sir yeah i think that i think the downside is is you were
going to be in the military and that means they own your butt right yeah i don't have a problem
with that my father was a member of the air force so i have no issue serving my country at all the
only slight holdup i had is my contract starts immediately when I sign,
like this October, so I'll be done.
I'll be getting three years done while I'm in college.
But the last three years I'll be doing while I have my career.
And I know legally jobs can't say no to hiring, but I'm still just a little.
No, we hire folks.
We've got several folks in there.
We just got an award from them. For our employees, when they. No, we hire folks. We've got several folks. We just got an award from them.
Our employees, when they go out, we pay them.
We keep paying them.
That's one way that we show our patriotism here at Ramsey.
So there's some jobs that go the other way,
like they're really proud to have you on
and proud that you're not here.
I mean, some of our guys, one of my tech guys the other day
stepped out he was gone for a period of time with the guard and then came back and he and i were
talking about it at lunch and uh but they came the other day and gave gave ramsey an award for this
for the number of times that we've supported our guard people when they go out and so yeah that's
but there are there are actual americans that are proud to support you and that own businesses out here like me.
That's right.
And so, but yeah, I don't think it's a hold up.
No.
I wouldn't hold that up a bit.
As long as you get the idea that, you know, you're not, I hate the military, but I'm doing
this for the money.
I wouldn't do that.
Right.
But I'm not hearing that at all with you.
You don't want to serve your country.
Your parent, your dad was in the forces.
And so, yeah, I, Luke, I think it's brilliant. Brilliant. I'm totally signing on for this. Yeah. want to serve your country your parent your dad was in the forces and so yeah i i luke i think
it's brilliant brilliant i'm totally signing on for this yeah i you know this is uh i'm not going
to get into policy here but you know we've got this the the federal government dave is in the
banking business in the onerous student loan program and they you know certain administrations
will make it a political football and yet not shut the program down. But this to me, there's something here. And I've long felt like we need some type of national service program, whether it's in the military or something else. And I love this option. I wish more young people would do this to combat the rising tuition costs and not be stuck with generations of debt. This is such a viable option and good because you become a part
of something far bigger than yourself. I love this program. You know, until you said that just then,
in my entire life, I have never thought until just this second that if you want your student
loans forgiven, that you go serve your country for a period of time and we will forgive some of them,
that might be a student loan forgiveness program I could actually get behind.
I think millions of Americans would get behind it.
I would get behind it.
Yeah.
But I'm sitting on my butt and I'm a victim.
Right.
And so you need to forgive my loans.
I really have trouble getting behind that one.
I don't like that one either.
I paid mine off.
You should pay yours.
Yeah.
It's not fair.
People like me finally get to say it's not fair.
You don't get to say that.
You're not allowed.
I know.
Fair is where the tilt-a-whirl is and the cotton candy.
So, you know, that's where fair is.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Maddie is in Phoenix.
Hey, Maddie, welcome to The Ramsey Show.
Hi.
So, a little little backstory on me
i'm 26 years old i work as a pharmacist for a retail chain i'm currently on bb step four
good for you so you're a pharmacist that's correct way to go and you're a pharmacist. That's correct. Way to go. And you're out of debt. No pharmacy school debt.
I know.
It only took 18 months to pay off.
You are a rock star, kiddo.
That's awesome.
Very good.
How can we help you?
So the store I currently work for only gives me 32 hours, which is not enough hours for me.
And that's pretty standard amongst all of their stores. But I do go to a busy store
that has a little bit more hours to make up the 40. And I often pick up. Well, the busy store I
work at, one of their pharmacy positions is opening up and I have been asked to apply to it.
So this would be a guaranteed 40 hours every single week i could
still pick up if i wanted to um it would be about twenty eight thousand dollars more a year what are
we waiting on why are we saying yes why did you even have to ask wait i can i can actually work
a whole 40 hours and make twenty eight thousand dollars more and work while I'm at work because they're busy instead of sitting
on your butt while you're at work yes go take the job kiddo it's just a very stressful what's
stressful well you're counting pills what's stressful it's it's a lot more of that you
know I deal with insurance I deal with people who don't feel good okay let me dive right in on this
okay okay Maddie let me dive right on this do you know it's what you went to school for that's right but if it's
more intense do you know how to actually handle that once you're done working do you know how to
eat right exercise have a hobby get sleep these are the things that allow you to handle a high
pressure job can you do that i'm working on it
you know what maddie you have already proven you're the kind of person that can handle this
you're not a weak sister yeah you can do this it's not it's 40 hours you have what it takes 40 hours
yeah you can do this you you got what it takes you need to go do this you're already signing up
for this kind of stuff anyway because they're not challenging you at the other place.
Don't you hear yourself?
You've already done this, so go do it.
Yes, go take the money.
Good job.
Proud of you.
Ken Coleman, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
He and all the other Ramsey Personalities along with me will be on a seven-day cruise.
The Ramsey Cruise.
The Live Like No One Else Cruise.
For those of you that are baby step four and beyond and are ready to do vacations and strike some milestones,
Live Like No One Else, so that later you can now go on the Live Like No One Else Cruise.
There you go.
We're going to be doing this in March.
That's March 22nd through the 29th.
And it's all the Ramsey personalities on there all week long,
along with my friend Stephen Curtis Chapman, Grammy Award winning,
Dove Award winning.
And Ken, I was with Stephen Monday night at my house at a thing,
and he just got inducted into the Grand Ole Opry.
I saw that on his Instagram.
What a cool moment. Grand Ole Opry, first major Christian artist to get inducted into the Grand Ole Opry. I saw that on his Instagram. What a cool moment.
Grand Ole Opry.
First major Christian artist to get inducted into the Grand Ole Opry.
Ricky Skaggs brought him in.
I saw that.
Really cool.
Really fun stuff.
Proud of him.
And so he'll be with us.
And Manit Chauhan from the Food Channel, famous Iron Chef, will be with us.
She's a great entrepreneur.
Owns a bunch of restaurants here in Nashville.
Is a good friend.
Be doing some cooking demonstrations.
Dina Carter, famous country artist as well.
Tons of other entertainers.
And all of us will be doing events and talks on the ship.
There won't be any regular dancing poodle people on the ship.
We'll just be it.
Hey, I have some breaking news, though, Dave.
Oh, what's that?
This might hit a small percentage of the folks that want to come,
because it's going to sell out quick, by the way, you got to move.
But I found out from the actual cruise line themselves, I took a shot and I said, is there
a pickleball court on this cruise?
And I'm happy to report that there is a pickleball court or courts on this ship.
So I will not be at the pool.
You will find me when not speaking, uh, or saying hi to folks.
I will be hosting holding court court, literally, Dave.
We can teach it.
We can compete.
All levels, fun.
We're there to make our fans feel better by beating you.
No, I'll teach them.
I got to tell you, James, I'm so excited.
This is a fact.
If you're thinking about coming, you're going, wait a second.
I won't miss my weekly pickleball game.
There you go.
And I maybe get Dave out there.
Will you commit to playing one game?
Absolutely not.
What?
Not a chance.
I don't know, folks.
I'm telling you.
It's the number one thing that puts men over 55 in the emergency room.
Well, they have doctors on board.
It's going to be fine.
I know.
That's what I need.
We'll put you in an air cast.
A dadgum pickleball injury.
That would be embarrassing all right so turks and caicos st thomas puerto rico the bahamas
we would love to have you come with us we're going to have a lot of fun my wife sharon i'll be there
the whole week ramsey solutions.com slash cruise you can put down a 600 deposit there is just a few
cabins left it is almost gone you're going gonna hear us quit talking about it and then you're
gonna go oh i missed it and then you're gonna have fomo or whatever they call that and um you're
gonna wish you could have come and then you go when you're gonna do another one dave and i'm
probably not so don't miss this one i'm telling you that's this is great it's holland america
it's a high-end ship this is not one of those cheapos this is not walmart on the seas this is
a great great high-end thing I don't do that stuff.
I do nice stuff.
So come hang out with us, guys.
It's going to be fun.
All right, Latrice is with us in Detroit.
Hi, Latrice.
How are you?
Hi, how are you doing, Dave?
Better than I deserve.
What's up in your world?
Just kind of going through with Capital One.
So to make it short, Capital One did proceed illegally legally to pretty much get payment for a credit revolving credit card that went negative just because I
went through an economic hardship. We've been to court once. They asked, could I settle for
the overall debt with legal fees was $7,000. And they wanted me to settle out for $6,000
with interest incurring. I told them that I could not afford that,
that my health is not, you know,
you need sustainable employment right now because I can't stand up,
so I'm still on a job hunt,
and it's just causing me a great financial deficit.
You don't have a job.
Yes, I do have a job.
Oh, you do have a job.
Yes, but it doesn't bring in much.
It's only part-time because of just the way my physical health is set up right now.
What's wrong with your physical health?
Basically, I'm suffering from a heart murmur, and also I was in a bad car accident,
and I have one of my spinal discs dislocated, and I'm supposed to have a surgery,
so it's hard for me to stand.
Wow. How long ago was the car wreck?
It was 2022, the end of the summer.
I want to say August.
I'm sorry.
That back stuff is so painful. I'm so sorry.
Yeah, I'm suffering a lot.
When's the surgery?
I'm scheduled to have it in October.
I'm looking for my official date.
My physician is supposed to contact me to let me know that official date,
but I know it's in October.
And what can you do to earn some money until you get the surgery?
Because you're suffering because you have no income.
Yeah, basically, you know.
Capital One is not your problem.
You have no income is your problem.
Yes, but I was.
A family member was actually able to help me,
and I was able to, you know, gather up $2,000.
And I asked them would they settle out with me,
and I actually filed a second motion, and they pretty much denied it.
It was an installment payment,
and so now they're trying to go for the full amount.
And I guess I'm trying to figure out how to.
Where are they going to get the full amount? don't have it and you don't even have
a job they could do they don't they're garnishing part-time jobs okay i mean what are you making
right now in your part-time job per hour um i'm making about 20 and what are you doing for that
what's the work um so basically i'm doing fulfillment or warehouse work. Are you sitting
down doing the fulfillment work on a chair? No. So you're standing. No, that's why it's part-time.
Yes. Okay. Can you drive your car with not too much discomfort? Can you drive your car? Not
really, no. You can't drive? No. Someone's driving you to and from work? Yeah. Okay. I mean, here's my point. I understand I've had back injuries, really rough stuff before
where you can't even move. I get that. But the fact that you're part-time, you're able to do
something that you're standing to in fulfillment. I would be looking at call service work. That's
customer service stuff where you're answering the phone, following a script. Can you be a receptionist and just be smiling and say hi and sit down behind a
desk and welcome people at a small business? I mean, Latrice, this is serious business,
and I think you can do more than you're doing. And I'm not being unkind in any way, nor am I
in any way overlooking the injury, but you can do more. And at $20 an hour, part-time
you've proven that you can do that. Yeah. That's pretty impressive that you're doing that. So
yeah, I'm going to do anything I can to get my income up. And then I'm going to up the offer
because I'm going to have some cash to stack on top of the 2000 and I'll up the offer to 3000
or 4,000 in the meantime,, Capital One can't do anything.
You can't get blood out of a rock.
And right now you're a rock.
You can't get blood out of a tournament.
You can hit a brick with a hammer, but it doesn't do anything.
And so they can't get money that you don't have.
And there's no debtor's prison.
They're not going to put you in prison.
There's no such thing.
So you have been very proactive and have engaged with them,
and it might have given them false hope that you were actually going to come up with the whole thing.
You're not.
So offer them $2,000 and say, hey, I'm over here.
I can do $2,000 if you want to call me back.
Meantime, good luck collecting this because I got no money.
And the $2,000 is not even in my name. It's sitting in my relative's name. So you can't even get it. So I'm going to go to work.
I'm going to get my back fixed. I'm going to pile up some money. I'll call you back when I got a
little more money. We'll try to do this again. But in no case am I going to be paying you $7,000
or $6,000 or the whole thing. You can just bite bite my ankle it's not happening okay and just you know walk away there's nothing they can do just like a dog chasing a car
nothing they can do and they catch it they don't know what to do with it so um it's the same thing
that's exactly where you are so uh you're what we in the business call judgment proof.
They can't do anything with their judgment because you're broke.
There's nothing to get.
Now you go get a big time, full time job.
They may figure out where that is.
Don't tell them.
Don't volunteer anything about your employment to them ever in this until they're never.
And never do they ever need to know where you work the rest of your life and you're not required to tell them so i would just ignore their butts and there's nothing they
can do about it because you're you know well we got somebody with a broken back who works part-time
good luck so um i just tell them to wait and know, you can take the 2000 or you can wait
and I'll try to get you some more and we'll try to do it later. I'll call you back when I got three
and then I'll call you back when I got four. And, um, but eventually you're going to have to say yes,
because I'm not going to do anything else. And that that'll work out for you. That's what you
got to do. I'm sorry. You're facing all this. But yeah, anything you can do to get your income up, anything you can do to get a long-term career path going here that works,
that's a smart move.
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.
Ken Coleman, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
This hour is a Baby Steps Millionaires Theme Hour.
What does that mean?
It means we're going to talk to actual millionaires,
not your broke brother-in-law with an opinion.
We want to talk to people who actually have a net worth of
$1 million or greater, learn a little bit about them, and then you can listen in and say, gosh,
I could do that. I could be like that person. This is an hour about hope because we have discovered
that the typical millionaire in America started from nothing and became a millionaire. And we're
going to walk you through that.
We'll help you with this because there's a lot of misinformation, lies out there about
wealth, where it comes from.
It's all inherited.
No, it's not.
That's just not the facts.
And I can prove it to you, and I'll walk you through it this hour.
So if you have a millionaire net worth, a net worth of $1
million or greater, call us. We want to talk to you and interview you and learn a little bit about
you. Folks, let me help you with this. One of the things that gets confused out there is the
definition of a millionaire. There's only one definition. This is an accounting definition.
There's only one. Net worth millionaire is redundant because net worth is how you measure
whether you're a millionaire. So there's not a different kind of millionaire and a net worth
millionaire. There's only a millionaire whose net worth is greater than a million dollars.
So by definition, they're the same thing. So there's no such thing as an income millionaire.
You can make a million dollars a year, but that doesn't make you a millionaire. What makes you a millionaire is if what you own minus what you owe, your assets
minus your liabilities equals one million dollars or more, you are by definition a millionaire.
Well, people shouldn't have that much money. It's not a moral construct. It's a math thing, darling.
It's too difficult. A million dollars isn't enough in this inflationary market. It's not
a question of that. The question is, do you have a million dollars isn't enough in this inflationary market. It's not a question of that.
The question is, do you have a million dollars?
That's the only question we're talking about here.
Do you have a million dollars worth of assets exceeding your liabilities?
That is the definition.
You can like it, not like it, agree with it, not agree with it.
This is not a feeling.
It's a math thing.
And then we want to learn how you got there, where did the money come from, inherit from your rich uncle how'd you get your money so that's what we're doing
the phone number here is 888-825-5225 our first millionaire is in flint michigan dave what is
your net worth dave my net worth is around 2.3 million good for you can you give me a little
bit of breakdown
by category? How much in retirement, how much in house, and so on? All right, so $750,000
is the assessed value of my paid-off home, and the rest of that is spread across some high-yield
savings accounts, a Charles Schwab stock account, a brokerage accountage account some 401ks and my wife has a 403b as a
public education okay so you've got about a million and a half in investments yes sir most
of that sounds like it's 401k i actually as a business owner i'm kind of, most of it is in my brokerage account because I don't qualify for the Roth IRAs.
Okay.
I got you.
Okay.
Good.
Good for you.
Well done.
How old are you?
51.
How much of this did you inherit?
Zero.
Zero.
Okay.
Since you've been working as an adult, what has been your best year of income and your worst year of income uh so my worst year of income was 32 000 and my best year was 855 000 holy what do you do oh you
own a business what's your business do uh so two businesses i have a electrical contracting
business and i have a uh overhead door contracting business gotcha. He's in the trades, folks.
I love it.
You got a four-year degree?
I do not.
Okay.
High school?
I went to trade school to be an electrician.
Okay, trade school.
Nice.
All right.
And you made $855,000 one year.
Yeah, there we go.
Okay.
I like this.
I like this.
Well done.
Okay.
Thank you.
So what do you drive? I drive the GMC Sierra pickup truck
how old uh a year a year old okay what's your what's your wife what's your wife drive uh
Chevy Traverse okay and how old is it? It's four years old.
Okay.
And you have $2.3 million.
Okay.
Yes, sir.
Good.
All right.
I'm just making sure people are hearing this.
This is what it sounds like to be a millionaire in America right now.
This is exactly what it sounds like.
Well done.
Do you think people can still do this, Dave, in America now?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Very cool.
Without a doubt.
Good. Why?
Why so strong in that opinion?
Basically because I didn't think I could get there until I did it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I never thought I had an opportunity to be where I'm at today.
It still amazes me.
Ken, I would go.
Thank you, Dave.
You're a hero.
I'm proud of you.
I would go so far as to say the trades are in such desperate demand right me. Yeah. Ken, I would go, thank you, Dave. You're a hero. I'm proud of you. I would go so
far as to say the trades are in such desperate demand right now that if you go his route,
you're probably more likely to get there than it was when he did it. There's no question. Today.
Here's what happens. This is the progression. You get in, you make really good money. You're not
saddled with student loan debt. You learn a skill. You get really good at it.
You keep moving up the ladder, and then all of a sudden an opportunity pops up to where you can
start your own business. And now you're like a Dave where your best year you make $800,000,
and you're also a small business employer. It's 51 years old with $2.3 million starting from
nothing. That's going to turn into a whole lot more money over the next 30 years.
So because of all the leftist communist crap that is spread out there in America right now,
we decided a few years ago we were going to do the largest study of millionaires ever done in North America.
We studied not just people that knew who Dave Ramsey were, but in general.
We studied 10 000
millionaires we ended up talking to 10 167 of them and in detail we had an outside research
firm looking over our shoulder to make sure there wasn't confirmation bias or other survey
other research problems our research techniques were airtight because we knew the lefties would
be pissed off and they knew then we knew the lefties would be pissed off.
And we knew they would question the validity of the study.
This study is so airtight that it's what's known as a fact.
The conclusions of this study, if you disagree with them, you're what's known as wrong, in other words.
Okay?
So 79% of America's millionaires inherited precisely nothing like Dave, our last caller.
Another 5% inherited money, but it was like $5,000 from grandmother. It wasn't enough to mathematically make you a millionaire.
Another 5% received a substantial inheritance, like $250,000 or something from grandma,
after they were already millionaires.
So let me help you with this 79 plus 5 plus 5
is 89 percent of america's millionaires are not millionaires because of inherited money
they're millionaires because they lived on less than they made they funded their 401k they got
their house paid off and they used
common sense over an extended period of time of their life. The typical millionaire is 48 to 51
years old. Dave fits the profile perfectly. Our last caller, we did not tell Dave what to say.
He just happened to fit what we discovered very closely. We talked to some 25 year old millionaires.
We talked to some 85 year old millionaires, but the closely. We talked to some 25-year-old millionaires. We talked to some 85-year-old millionaires.
But the typical profile we talk to falls in that late 40s, early 50s range.
And by the way, if you're a millionaire by then,
you're going to be worth $10 million when you die.
So that's how that works, just to help you with the math.
This is a Baby Steps Theme Hour.
Ken Coleman, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
This is a Baby Steps Millionaires Theme Hour.
We're talking to actual millionaires.
Alex is one in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
Alex, what's your net worth?
Hey, Dave.
My net worth, $2,124,000. 2-1-2. I love it. Okay, give me a little breakdown by category. oh hey dave uh worth uh two million one hundred and twenty four thousand dollars
two one two i love it okay give me a little breakdown by category home retirement and so
forth sure um my house i paid for house four hundred and seventy five thousand uh i've got
about sixty three thousand in cash about seventy five thousand000 in just cash and brokerage mutual funds, $75,000 for the kids college.
I've got about 1.3 million in different retirement funds, IRAs, 401ks, I have an ESOP.
My wife has a pension as a teacher.
And then about $20,000 or so in health savings.
Well done.
How old are you?
42.
42.
How much of this did you inherit?
Zero.
Okay.
And since you've been working as an adult, what was your best year earnings and your worst year earnings?
Yeah, my wife and I together, I guess our worst year, the first year we got married,
was about $60,000. We had pretty entry-level jobs. And then my highest year in the last couple of years, we together were at $290,000.
Good for you. And what's your career?
I'm in residential construction, the construction industry, and my wife's a teacher, a high school science teacher.
Okay. All right, cool. You got a four-year degree?
I do, but at first I went to a trade school, got that two-year degree in residential design,
and just worked my way up on a company that was willing to pay for a four-year degree in residential design and just worked my way up on a company that was willing
to pay for a four-year degree and i got that four-year degree in industrial management got it
what was your gpa uh i want to say it was right around 3.9 3.9 yes show off yeah you were an adult
you're an adult student there's no beer involved in that number.
My wife's the winner.
She got a 4.0 on her math.
Oh, there we go.
Make it stop.
I love it.
What advice would you have for the younger version of you that's listening that's 22 or 23 years old right now?
Can they still do this, and what should they do?
Oh, heck, yeah, they can do it.
I mean, be educated.
Be a champion for yourself. there's going to be a
lot of chap out there a lot of people that are going to tell you what you think they think you
should do with your money my advice to me again if i were to go back is just stay the course i'd
like to i told my kids as as they're starting to learn about money now i was 16 when i finally had
some w-2 wages and i think I took most of my wages,
and I want to say at that time it was like $500,
and my dad said, hey, you got to put this in a Roth IRA.
So at 16, I put my $500 into a Roth,
not knowing what it was going to do.
And as a matter of fact, I saved that statement
as I moved houses here a few years ago,
found it in a pile of papers.
But I showed my son, right? That $500
is at 8% S&P. I mean, it was like $12,000. And I've done $500 into my Roth and my retirements,
you know, five, six, 700 times over in the past 30 years or so. Yeah. And it's just huge.
Yeah, you're loaded.
You're 1.3 in retirement.
You've loaded that up.
You did a great job.
Well done, Alex.
Well done.
What do you drive?
An 02 F-150.
02?
Yeah.
Dude, that's old.
Hey, beautiful.
You need a truck.
Oh, come on now. You need to upgrade your truck. You got $2 million. Okay, beautiful. You need a truck. Oh, come on now.
You need to upgrade your truck.
You got $2 million.
Okay, so what's your wife drive?
An old five-port Focus.
God, y'all, a Focus?
Jeez, man.
Don't you love your wife?
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah, that thing, that's awful.
I'm kidding with you.
But, hey, dude do do seriously most of the
millionaires i meet with when they're your age and they hit this the the thing you guys are the
worst at is upgrading your cars and you really can't afford it now i mean it's god almighty a
focus yeah way to go dude i'm so proud of you thanks for letting me make fun of you open phones
here at 888-825-5225.
If you have a million dollar or greater net worth, we want to talk to you.
Amy is a millionaire in Dallas, Texas.
Amy, what's your net worth?
Hi, yes, sir.
My net worth is $3.1 million.
$3.1 million.
Give me a little breakdown by category, how much by house, retirement, and so on.
Sure. 1 million in our 401ks, 500,000 for our house, 900,000 in company stock,
400,000 in non-retirement investments like brokerage accounts,
and then 200,000 in Roth IRAs and about 100,000 cash.
Way to go. I love this. How old are you?
I'm 35.
My husband's 34.
Wow.
Look at you.
Way to go.
How much of this did you inherit?
I think my husband inherited a little less than $50,000 after we've been married for
a while.
So obviously after we were already millionaires.
Okay.
So you're not millionaires because of an inheritance? Correct. Just make sure the lefties hear this. Okay. Now. All right. And now, so
what, since you've been working as adults, what's your best year working income and your worst year
working income? So obviously we started out separately. So we started out like individually
making about $60,000 each. Um, when we it was about $120,000. And then our best year
was $375,000 plus bonuses and equity. Okay, cool. What do y'all do?
We both have electrical engineering degrees. Okay, all right. Is that what you do?
Yes, yes. That's a very broad field, but yeah, so we're both engineers, working engineers, yes.
Gotcha, okay. Gotcha.
Okay.
And it got you into some positions where you got some stock options and everything else.
Well done.
Okay, cool.
So your degrees are obviously in engineering, electrical engineering to be specific.
What was your GPA?
Mine was 3.4.
His was 3.1.
Now we know how this works.
Now it works at your house.
Okay.
You have proof of anything.
Yeah, I love it very
fun so uh we found in the top five categories of careers in the most often occurring in the
10 167 millionaires number one was engineer yes sir now number two was accountant number three
was teacher number four was uh lawyer and number four i'm sorry business executive number two was accountant, number three was teacher, number four was lawyer, and number,
I'm sorry, business executive, number five was lawyer. Medical doctor didn't even make the top
five. Teacher beat them, and engineer's the top of the heap. You're right there, and you doubled
up on the engineer thing here. Yeah, and so at 35 years old, you're worth 3.1 million dollars.
That's amazing. What would you tell somebody that's in school
studying engineering? Is it still possible
in America, or is the dream
dead? I tell
even my cousin who's a sister,
or my cousin who's a teacher,
it's still possible, but
I think I might be repeating
you, Mr. Ramsey, but
no discipline seems pleasant at the time,
but it yields the harvest of righteousness. Well, that would be the Bible you'resey, but no discipline seems pleasant at the time, but it yields the harvest of
righteousness.
Well, that would be the Bible you're repeating, but yeah, let's go.
Yeah, fair enough.
Fine.
Tortoise always wins.
Yeah, there we go.
That would be me.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah, that's exactly it.
Yeah, you guys just, you've used your systematic, your brains are built for systems, and you
use the system.
I also play basketball, so I've got to have a game plan.
There it is.
Got to have a system.
Got to have a plan and execute.
And you did it.
You did it beautifully.
All right.
What do you drive?
I drive a Chevy Impala 2017.
Be nice, Dave.
It's a 2005 GTO.
Oh, boy.
That's a fun car, but we did splurge a little bit a couple years ago.
As a family car, we bought a 2021 Yukon.
Good.
Oh, there we go.
Thank God.
Okay.
Good catch.
Yeah.
Dave did not like the Impala.
He doesn't like the Ford Focus.
No, I don't mind that.
Impala's not a bad car.
It's just you got $3 million freaking dollars.
I mean, you know.
So, yeah, it's just this is a pattern.
Yeah, that's right.
So let's do this one.
Here's a fun one.
What's the most expensive pair of jeans you've ever bought?
Oof, I hate spending money on clothes.
I'm not the typical girl, so maybe $25.
Wow.
What about your husband?
Same.
What do you get $25 jeans walmart on sale yeah
with a coupon 3.1 million dollar net worth when you're 35 are you people out there learning
anything everybody say go amy go amy go amy wow you're incredible hero i love you i'm proud of
you good work very well done this is a baby steps millionaires theme hour Amy, go, Amy. Wow, you're an incredible hero. I love you. I'm proud of you. Good work.
Very well done.
This is a Baby Steps Millionaires theme hour.
Ken Coleman Ramsey, personality, is my co-host.
This is a Baby Steps Millionaires theme hour.
Thanks for hanging out with us.
Amy said it a minute ago, the best way to win a game is to have a game plan.
No one wins or is successful
at any area of their life accidentally.
Winning is not an accidental event.
It's a series of good choices
following a proven process,
a game plan.
When you do that with your money each month,
it's called a budget.
Tell your money what to do instead of wondering where it went.
My friend Zig Ziglar used to say, if you aim at nothing, you will hit it every time.
And so you need to write it down.
You need to have a game plan for your money.
And the world's best budgeting app is called EveryDollar.
It is free to download at the App Store or Google Play, or you can go to everydollar.com.
You can spend a little bit with it, and we'll put you through the baby steps,
a paycheck planning thing, and hook you up to your bank.
And it starts to do all kinds of fancy-dancy things.
Millions and millions and millions of people are using this, EveryDollar.
Check it out in the App Store.
Damon is with us.
Damon is in Oklahoma City.
Damon, what's your net worth?
About $1.6 million, Dave.
Good for you.
And what is your breakdown by category a little bit for me?
So I've got about $700,000 in my TSP, about $100,000 in Roths for my wife and I. I've got about $400,000 in rental real
estate, and the rest is in cash. And I'm sorry, my personal residence is worth about $360,000.
Okay. All right. There you go. Good for you. Very cool. How old are you?
I'm 45.
All right. Good. Another young millionaire here. How much of this did you inherit?
We inherited about $10,000 about 15 years ago, and we used that to pay off our house.
We were on a plan to pay off our first house in about 70 months, and we did it in 60.
Okay.
So mathematically, you're not a millionaire because of a $10,000 inheritance, though.
Oh, no, no.
It just sped things up for us for about six months.
That's excellent.
Good.
What is the, since you've been working as an adult, what was your best year of income
and your worst year of income? My best year of income will be this year, probably about $155,000. And then our first
year of marriage, which would be 26 years ago tomorrow, we made a grand total of $14,000.
Well, happy anniversary. Good for you. What do you do for a living?
I'm a criminal investigator for the federal government and a certified fraud examiner.
Oh, cool.
Okay.
For your degree?
Yes, in criminal justice.
Of course.
Okay.
And your GPA?
My GPA was 3.7, but my wife's was a 4.0.
There's a pattern here.
All these millionaires marry women smarter than they are
i'm just saying okay uh i'm kidding but yeah or or more studious or something yeah way to go man
congratulations okay so you're 45 years old you have a 1.6 million dollar net worth
can this still be done if you're talking to a 25 year old 20 years younger than you absolutely uh and in my
household i've got a great example my son is 18 years old he just graduated from high school
he started a lawn mowing business when he was 14 uh he's got 50 000 saved right now
his plan is to stay at home while he goes to trade school for two years,
and he wants to save about 40% or 50% to put a down payment on a duplex.
Wow.
What trade school is he going to?
He's going to learn to be an aircraft mechanic.
Oh, very good.
What's that starting salary?
Starting salary is around $70,000 for that, and they've told us and i've talked to other people
that within two years you're making six figures yeah yeah that's more like it yeah that's very
cool wow very cool what do you drive i drive a 2800 with 160 000 miles on it good lord and what's your wife drive she drives a 10 year old minivan with 150 000
miles on it okay would you please get your wife a good car well we we still have a car that has a
name we had one when we were in college it was uncle jesse was all white pickup and we carried
on the tradition with my kids i've've got two drivers, and they drive.
We bought a 98 Oldsmobile, and they call that Gam Gam
because it's a little old grandma car.
That's perfect.
And Uncle Jesse.
From the Dukes of Hazzard.
I love that one.
That's great, yeah.
Oh, yeah, he drove a white pickup.
He did.
He drove a white truck.
I forgot that.
Yeah, it was an old white truck, yeah.
Okay.
Oh, my gosh.
That's so fun.
What's the most you guys ever spent on jeans, you or your wife?
Oh, I probably spent maybe $50 on a pair of jeans.
My wife probably has spent, oh, $80 or $90 on a pair of jeans,
but she looks pretty good in them, so I don't mind.
Well played, sir. Well played.
Good move. He did that on national
radio and a podcast with millions of people listening smooth very smooth i like that way
to go dude i'm proud of you good work bill is in st louis bill your net worth hey dave it's 1.8
million good for you and give me a little breakdown by category, please, house and retirement and so on.
Yeah, the 401Ks for my wife and I are 1.33, cash 145,000, and the house 323,000.
Gosh, good for you.
How old are you?
58.
My wife's 54.
All right.
And how much of this did you inherit?
I did inherit some last year, but we were already millionaires, so it didn't matter.
How much did you get?
$120,000. Okay, substantial, but it was after you were already there, so you're not a millionaire because of an inheritance, okay?
And since you've been working as an adult, what is your best year of household income and worst year?
Best year is now, it's $270,000, and when i started out 24 000 in the military
gotcha thanks for your service what's your career logistics both of us logistics very good
supply chain yes sir degree in logistics uh i have a two-year degree my wife has a four-year degree
okay what was your gpa on your two-year uh mine was my wife has a four-year degree. Okay. What was your GPA on your two-year?
Mine was probably three, and hers is, I'm going to be nice,
because I don't know for sure, but three and a half.
Nah.
3.5.
Be careful, yeah.
Very good. That's right.
All right.
So there's a 23-year-old listing, I promise you today,
that is just coming out of school with a logistics degree,
which I think, by the way, is an excellent degree right now to get.
Supply chain is huge right now.
Some of these guys are coming out of school making almost $100 right now
with a four-year degree in that field, and they should
because the service they provide to these companies is incredible.
What you do is a very valuable ROI.
Can they still do this?
Can they still be worth $1 million, $2 million, $3 million when they're 58?
Yes, sir.
Dave, let me tell you something.
We didn't really start your program until about 11 years ago.
We paid off all our debt in a year, and we started saving 15%,
and we were able to accumulate this much wealth in that short a time.
Wow.
So you did this in a little over a decade.
Yes, sir.
That's pretty cool. Good for you.
It can be done. And I just tell people to do it early. My, my daughter paid off her debt
five years ago. I mean, uh, five years after we, um, paid off ours and we came down to a
debt-free scream on your stage together with her. And, and now she's a physical therapist
making $150,000 and she's debt-free, so she's doing really good.
And my son and his wife are debt-free as well, so it's all been passed on.
What do you drive?
I drive a 2015 Tacoma and my wife drives a 2016 Lexus RX200 and we pay cash for both of them.
Excellent.
Quick question for you, Bill. For a young person that doesn't want to get the four-year degree,
can they still do the two-year associates like you did
and get into a really attractive industry like logistics?
Is that path still there?
Absolutely.
The military, you know, I was in logistics for 20 years,
and when I got out, it was fairly, I'm not going to say easy to get a job,
but I knew some people, and I applied
at the company. I've been at the company for almost 20 years now after I got out of the military,
and yeah, great company, and yeah, you can do it, no doubt. If you have the experience,
no doubt about it. Yeah, way to go, man. Proud of you, Bill. There's that military option again,
Dave. Good work. Well, it's not a bad thing. A lot of people are very successful, start their careers in the military.
Some of them conclude their careers in the military.
This is a Baby Steps Millionaire's Theme Hour on The Ramsey Show.
Our scripture of the day, Psalm 1832,
it is God who arms me with strength and keeps my way secure.
Jerry Seinfeld said, sometimes the road less traveled is less traveled for a reason.
Ken Coleman, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
This is a Baby Steps Millionaires theme hour.
One of the mythology things out there is that you have to have a 4.0
you have to be a genius to build wealth the truth is the average millionaire has around a 3.0 gpa
mine was 2.97 i'm still pissed about that three one hundredths of a point
missed it by three one hundredths i think beer was involved but yeah the um
yeah because i was smart enough to do it for sure but anyway the uh yeah there you go so
the typical millionaire you know we don't find people with a 1.2 gpa you got to have some gray
matter going on upstairs right dumb people really can't do it but but you don't have to be like the
valedictorian or
the salutatorian. As a matter of fact, there's some really sad research that just came out on
those two, how they underperform in the marketplace. But, um, sorry if you're the
valedictorian or the salutatorian, but anyway, yeah, it's, uh, that that's, you know, not always,
but there's, it, it's not an indicator. It's not an indicator. So there you go.
So A, they're not geniuses.
No.
B, they're not people that didn't have a life.
They have a life.
They're not entertainers.
These millionaires, they're not professional sports figures or Hollywood actors.
Less than 1% of America's millionaires are celebrity types that
you know who they are. Hardly any of them. Okay. And so this should give you great hope.
It should tell you that it can be done because this is who does it. And we talk to them
every time we do this theme hour. Nathan's in Salt Lake City. Nathan, what is your net worth?
Hey, Dave. It's right over $1 million.
Good for you. And give me a little breakdown by category.
Sure. It's about $610,000 in a home, about $320,000 in retirement, like 401k Roth IRA,
$50,000 in cash, $40,000 in 529, and about or 50,000 in cash and 40,000, 529 and about 20,000 in cars. Way to go. How old are you? 41. And my wife is just a little bit younger than me. Okay, good. You did it. Way to
go. How much of this did you inherit? Uh, zero, zero. And what was your, since an adult, what's
your best year of income and your worst year of income as an adult?
Worst would be about $60,000 and best would be about $160,000.
Okay, cool.
What do you do?
Business intelligence.
Okay, very good.
Good for you.
Four-year degree?
Master's in business.
Okay, MBA.
All right.
And what was your undergrad GPA?
Both undergrad and grad were about 3.8.
Okay, all right, good, good.
Yeah, you're unusually high.
Typically, people do better at grad school than they did in undergrad.
That's why I ask.
Somehow when you get to grad school, it's usually a little more serious,
but you evened it out, though.
Okay, good for you, good for you.
So, you know, a 20-year year younger than you 21 years old getting ready
to come out of school can they still do this or is the hope of wealth building in evil america
gone no it can it can absolutely be done um compound interest isn't a mystery so getting
on it early is better i my wife and i really didn't start until we were about 30,
but once we started working, your plan about four or five years ago
really just picked up and picked up steam.
Wow, that's two in a row that in 11 years did this.
Yeah, yeah.
That is really, really exciting for people to hear
because they think they've got to have this 30-year runway.
If they didn't do that, then they're way behind,
and this proves that it's not the case. Yeah, wow. Well done, sir. You're a hero. I'm proud of you.
Congratulations. Brent is in Salem, Oregon. Brent, what's your net worth?
1.58, Dave. Got it. And give me a little breakdown by category, please.
Yeah, you bet. So 1.15 of that is the house minus our mortgage. So equity in the house is
almost 900,000. We've got 105 in cash savings. We have about another 100 in college saving
accounts for our two boys and another $467,000 in retirement accounts.
Gotcha. Good. How old are you?
36 years old.
Good. And how much of this did you inherit?
Lucky enough to inherit just shy of $100,000.
Were you already a millionaire?
No, I wasn't.
The story there with that 100, that was earmarked for college.
So I was lucky enough that my parents set up a college fund
and ended up going to community college and in-state school.
So through some wise and smart college decisions,
was able to cash with my work, my parents' work, cash flow college,
and that $100,000 that was maybe supposed to be for college tuition
ended up rolling into a house down payment.
Gotcha. Good for you.
And what's your, as an adult, your best year of income and worst year of income?
Worst year of income would definitely be when we started your plan 13 years ago,
$29,000 a year.
I was a full-time student.
My wife was the only one working at $14 an hour.
And best year would be right around $300,000, just over.
My wife worked at a startup and was able to be one of those great stores where the startup ended up selling.
And we got a lump sum of about $100,000 at that time
that definitely boosted our income for that one year.
Yeah, very cool.
What do you do for a living?
My wife works in marketing, and I work in operation.
Okay.
You got a four-year degree?
I do.
3.6 GPA in my four-year degree, but it took me five and a half years to get that four-year degree.
What's the degree in?
Just a minor in business and a major in social science.
College was tough and kind of just did what I could to get through.
Good. Way to go, man. 36-year-old millionaire.
What do you drive?
16-year-old Toyota Tacoma.
They always laugh and say Toyota.
Yeah, the laugh, by the way, always lets us know that it's an older car.
It's a Toyota.
That's like four Tacomas.
I know.
I know.
Is this the millionaire truck, the Tacoma? Winston drives a Tacoma. That's like four Tacomas. I know. I know. Is this the millionaire truck, the Tacoma?
Winston drives a Tacoma.
That's good.
Yeah.
Well, you know, you've got a very reliable brand there.
We've had a nice mix.
A lot of Chevys, a lot of Fords, the Toyota.
A lot of trucks.
A lot of trucks.
A lot of pickup trucks in these millionaires.
By the way, no electric cars.
Just want to point that out.
No Teslas.
I didn't hear a single one.
Not one.
51 years old, 42, 35, 45, 58, 41, 36.
The last three callers all did it in 13 years or 11 years
from the time they started listening to us following the baby steps.
They're baby steps millionaires.
That should give you guys hope out there.
That's what we're doing and uh 2 million network 2.3 2.1
3.1 1.6 1.8 1 million and 1.58 this was a fairly young crew today to a 35 36 year old and a 41
that that's you know we didn't have a single one over 60 you know that that's a fairly young bunch today. So very interesting. And, you know, again,
engineers, criminal justice, logistics, masters in business, business, trades, construction.
Strong, one clear pattern, strong investment strategy. The diverse and stable, and they've
stayed with it, some longer than others, but
there's a consistency there. When we saw the breakdown, always a really good investment
strategy, very stable. Yeah, the reason we do these things is because all of the hogwash that's
out there running around in the media and on TikTok that the American dream is dead and that
you can't do this anymore, and it's more alive today than it has ever been in spite of the morons in Washington,
not because of them.
Okay, so you guys out there, don't let people steal your hope.
Don't let broke people that were trained by a communist college professor, steal your hope.
It's not real.
This is real.
We were talking to real people here.
We didn't script any of this.
This is all, and we've been doing this for years.
I've talked to thousands of these people.
You can do this, guys.
You can do it.
That puts us out of the Ramsey Show and the books.
We'll be back with you before you know it.
In the meantime, remember, there's ultimately only one way to financial peace,
and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace, Christ Jesus. Hey, folks, Dave Ramsey here.
You know, budgeting doesn't have to be boring.
You just need a budgeting app that's made with you in mind, and that's EveryDollar.
The EveryDollar app has helped millions of people work the baby steps
and take the stress out of planning and managing their money.
Start budgeting with EveryDollar for free right now.
Just go to RamseySolutions.com slash EveryDollar
and download the app today.
That's RamseySolutions.com slash EveryDollar.