The School of Greatness - The Psychology Behind Why You're Still Broke | George Kamel
Episode Date: June 3, 2026You can earn half a million dollars a year and still have nothing left by the end of the month. That's not a theory. A Goldman Sachs study found 40% of people making over $500,000 are living paycheck ...to paycheck. The income isn't the problem. The identity is. George Kamel, #1 national bestselling author of Breaking Free from Broke and co-host of The Ramsey Show, has taken thousands of calls from people who earned great money and lost it all. People who confused looking rich with building wealth. Couples who kept separate bank accounts right up until the marriage fell apart. His take: debt is never just a math problem. It's a behavior problem. And no budget in the world sticks until you decide what kind of person you're going to be with money. In this conversation, George breaks down why buy now pay later apps are engineered to increase your cart size by 40%, why prediction markets like Polymarket are doing to young men what gambling apps did to the last generation, and why the moment someone calls a financial decision an "opportunity," they've usually already started justifying a terrible one. The path to financial peace is simpler than you've been told. And it starts with creating friction, not removing it. Breaking Free From Broke: The Ultimate Guide to More Money and Less Stress Amazon Ebook Audiobook Smart Money Happy Hour George Kamel YouTube George's Instagram In this episode you will: Discover why debt is a psychology problem, not a math problem, and the identity shift you must make before any budget will actually stick Recognize the doom loop of emotional spending and how buy now pay later apps are designed to make you spend more, feel worse, and repeat the cycle Learn the seven Ramsey Baby Steps framework that has helped millions get out of debt and build real generational wealth Apply the SMART Spender framework from Breaking Free from Broke to make intentional purchases without guilt or impulse Understand how financial infidelity quietly destroys marriages and the warning signs hiding in plain sight For more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1936 For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960 Follow The Daily Motivation for essential highlights from The School of Greatness More SOG episodes we think you’ll love: Lewis Howes Solo [5 Money Habits To Financial Freedom] Dan Martell Vivian Tu TOPICS George Kamel, financial freedom, debt snowball, Baby Steps, financial infidelity, lifestyle creep, doom loop, buy now pay later, SMART Spender framework, Breaking Free from Broke Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Nobody really cares how you live your life. What kind of car do you drive? It's really just,
how secure are you? It's insecure people who have the hardest time building wealth, because every
dollar has to be spent flexing to look rich instead of becoming wealthy. He is a number one national
bestselling author, a co-host of the Ramsey Show and one of the top personal finance experts.
We have the inspiring George Camel in the house. I found out over 60% of people 35 and under,
social media is their number one source of financial advice. So you're watching a tick
talk of a guy telling you to go open up this whole life insurance policy, to borrow money tax
free, and then go buy 10 pieces of property. All they're doing is being over leveraged trying to get
rich quick, and they're going to fall flat on their face, or worst case, buy the guy's course
for $3,000 and then be broke after that. What does true financial freedom look like to you?
Hmm. I think it comes down to... If someone puts a million dollars away in their early
20s, how quickly would that get to $2 million? Well, it doubles about every single.
seven years. If you get a 10% rate of return, which is what we've seen in the S&P 500 over the last
50, 60 years, it doubles about every seven years. So one million turns to two million. So let's say
from 23 to 30, that's pretty wild. So two million turns to four million, four to eight, eight to
16. And you're going, okay, now you're in your 40s with 16 million because you got started early.
Now it's depressing for everyone watching who's gone, George, must be nice. I didn't have a million
dollars at 23. Yeah, neither did I. You might have 10 grand maybe at the end of the year if you're
lucky, right? If you really saved well at 23, 25, like you got to start somewhere. Yes. But the
people who wait and go, well, I want to enjoy life now. Investing's for later me. You're going to regret
that once you see how the math works on it. And I always tell people, the best time to plant the tree
was 20 years ago. The next best time is today. And so drop the baggage and the shame and the regret
and just go, hey, there's someone else out there who's even older than me who wishes they started at my age.
What is the mindset that needs to change in people in order for their bank account to change?
Ooh.
There's a lot of delayed gratification missing from today's culture, and it's not all your fault.
Like marketing, companies, technology, it all exists to create everything to be frictionless
so that your money passes through your fingers like sand.
And the problem is if you don't grab a hold of it and make a plan for it before the
marketing companies do, it's over. It's game over. Your bank account's going to be back to zero,
and you're going to be paycheck to paycheck. And here's what's crazy, Lewis. You would think,
well, people who make more money, it's much easier for them. I just saw a Goldman Sachs study.
40% of people who make over $500,000 are paycheck to paycheck. So it's not always the case that
you make more or you're just going to save more. If you don't get control of it, your lifestyle
creep will just rise up to meet you. You'll have a bigger car payment, a bigger house.
So 40% of people making over a half a million dollars a year are leaving paycheck to paycheck?
They're broke.
There's nothing left in the month after they make all of their payments.
How is that possible?
That's my question.
Now, if you listen to the Ramsey show, you'll go, oh, I see how it's possible.
They overextended themselves, over-leveraged, got way too big of a house too soon because
now you have to live a $500,000 lifestyle.
There's expectations.
Of course you don't have to.
You got to buy the boat.
This is sarcasm, by the way.
People watching are like, wow, this guy's an idiot.
It's sarcasm.
But there's expectations you put on yourself, expectations your people around you put on you.
And a lot of them are self-imposed, truthfully, because nobody really cares how you live your life,
what kind of car do you drive? It's really just, how secure are you? The more secure you are,
the better your ability to build wealth. It's insecure people who have the hardest time
building wealth, because every dollar has to be spent flexing to look rich instead of
becoming wealthy. Wow, man. Would you say that emotionally immature,
people could make lots of money, but they usually lose it all? Oh, I mean, Dave Ramsey would tell you that.
He'll be the first to tell you he out-earned his stupidity in his 20s. He knew how to make money
in real estate, but he was so over-leverage, so cocky about it that he lost it all because there was
so much risk in his life. And that's why we are so anti-debt. It's because debt equals risk,
more debt equals more risk. And if you go on social media, which I found out over 60% of people
35 and under, social media is their number one source of financial advice. So you're watching a
TikTok of a guy telling you to go open up this whole life insurance policy, to borrow money, tax
free, and then go buy 10 pieces of property. All they're doing is being over leveraged trying to get
rich quick. And they're going to fall flat on their face, or worst case, buy the guy's course for
$3,000 and then be broke after that. What is the, if someone says, I've,
an amazing financial opportunity in front of me where I could double my money in the next six to
12 months. It's this revolutionary new thing. It's decentralized. It's this unbelievable opportunity.
You've got to get it now before everyone. What do you say to someone that's like, I think I can double
my money in the next six to 12 months? Oh, man. Number one, I go, why? What's behind that?
Because usually it's one of three things. It's fear, it's greed, or it's pride. And I call those the three
stooges of wealth building in my book, Breaking Free from Broke, because at the root of it,
I was looking back at all the Ramsey Show calls we've taken where someone fell flat on their
face, trying to build wealth faster than they should have. And there's nothing wrong with making
a lot of money. There's nothing wrong with doing it in a shorter amount of time. But I love this
biblical proverb. Proverbs 1311 says, wealth gained hastily will dwindle. But whoever gathers little by
little will increase it. And so that's tortoise in the hair. And so the faster you're trying to chase
something, the higher the chance you won't get there. So that's the scary part when someone goes,
well, I'm going to double my money in six to 12 months. Who told you that? It's a, that's a guy,
an acquaintance or a guy I met at a party. Whatever it is, they're full of it. If it sounds too good
to be true, it is. I mean, there's no guarantees in this life. Anyone telling you anything is
guaranteed to devil your money, you're about to get hosed on this deal. And so the more boring it is,
the more excited I get about the opportunity, quote unquote, because I'll tell you, Lewis,
the only time I hear the word opportunity on the Ramsey show is when someone is trying to justify
a terrible decision.
Really?
But they've convinced themselves that I have an opportunity to buy the house from my dad,
even though I'm broke and don't have the money.
It's always an opportunity.
An opportunity to lose your money.
Yeah.
But that's human psychology.
That's how we can justify it.
Well, it's an opportunity.
I'll never get this again.
And there's always going to be another opportunity around the corner that is getting ready to make you broke.
might be one or two people here and there out of a million that like actually do this like okay
I got that opportunity and it worked and they somehow made it happen and that's a scary thing
you'll hear stories of people saying oh I put my money in here and we flipped this house and
doubled it within six months and there's no problems but for every one of those there's a million
of other people that lost their money on that same type of deal yeah right it's like it's so
rare and to think that you're going to be the one that's price I guess you could go for it and
know that you might lose it all.
Yeah.
I've done that.
Well, the people who always share that one win,
you go click through their profile.
They've got a course to sell you.
So, of course, they have to keep up this facade
that they'll show you the way to do it.
Yeah.
When really, they either are lying or they got lucky
or they're making their money from their course,
not from their brilliant financial strategy.
Right, right.
So I always, I love to be skeptical and cynical
when it comes to opportunities and get rich quick.
What is a net worth someone should have at 30?
40 and 50 in your mind for them to feel like they're on the right track for financial freedom.
And what does it mean if someone's behind those benchmarks at 30, 40, and 50?
I love this question because there is no magic answer. And if I told you, you got to have a
million by 30. Well, I'm just the next shyster, you know, making you feel hopeless. And so at Ramsey,
we are a transformation company that we're hope dealers in a sense. Because, you know,
because it doesn't matter what's happening at 30.
It matters on where you're going,
what your current life is,
and do you have control of the money you have coming in?
Because I'm not worried about the person who's 30.
I'm worried about the person who's 65
and never learn this stuff,
because you can make up a lot of ground from 30 to 60.
Now, if you want to give you a baseline,
because I've done a lot of these videos on my YouTube channel
saying, hey, here's the average net worth,
here's the camel financial scoring system
of what would be an A-plus.
Yeah, what is that?
And so to me, that is you are debt-free, you have money in the bank, and you're investing for the future.
Debt-free minus your mortgage?
Yeah.
So now the mortgage, once you have that paid off, and this is what happened to me, the home equity from my paid-off house plus our investment accounts was equal to over a million dollars.
So that's a million-dollar net worth.
Now, it's not-30.
Yes.
It's not liquid, though.
People go, well, you can't count the house.
It's an asset.
I don't know what to tell you.
Accounting term says net worth is assets minus liability.
What you own minus what you owe.
Now, liquid millionaire would be you have a million dollars.
You could hit cash out and take that money.
So by 30, I think a good goal if you can do this is if you can be a homeowner building equity
and be debt free with money in the bank, you're crushing it.
Whether you have a $200,000 net worth or a million dollar net worth.
Any money in the bank, five grand, ten grand, doesn't matter.
If you have three to six months of expenses and you have a home that is a reasonable portion of your take home pay, like 20,
25% or less, you are ahead of 99.9% of America.
At 30.
At 30.
Not saying you have your home paid off, but if you have one, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
And we found the average millionaire in our millionaire study, over 10,000 or study, the average
age when someone hit millionaire status was 49 years old.
So people who go, George is too late for me, man, I'm 35 and I thought I was going to have
a million dollars by now.
Well, the average actual millionaire who's done it doesn't get there until 49.
So give yourself some grace.
And that's what's just total net worth millionaire.
right? That's not cash millionaire. Exactly. So my, I would say a good goal if you want to set one
is to have a million dollar net worth by 50. And that might mean by 40, you're at half a million.
Right, right. By 30, you're at a quarter of a million. And also, is this with dual income,
or is this with as an individual? It depends. We see different numbers for household income versus
individual income. You know, household income is about 80 grand. Average American salary is about 67 grand.
and people always ask, well, how does that work with that worth? And I go, well, my wife and I,
we are one entity. There is no her money and our money. And, you know, I hope we never get divorced.
I hope, you know, we're married until death do us part. But the truth is, we have a similar lifestyle.
It's not like your expenses double just because you got married. You know what I mean? It doesn't
work like that. And so as far as net worth goes, her name's on the deed of the house. My name's on the
to the house. Our names are on the cars and everything we own is ours. And so, sure, would it be
nice if she had, you know, we had two million dollars net worth and now we're, if you even split it,
you'd still both be millionaires. Sure, that's a great goal. But as far as accounting goes,
on paper, you guys are net worth millionaires, whether it's single or dual. Do you think it's
easier to build wealth if you have a married couple who are fully committed to a vision of
following the, you know, the baby steps that you guys have, being debt-free, being an alignment
on values around money versus an individual trying to do that. Oh, yeah. I mean, it's a wealth
multiplier to get married. There's a financial aspect to it. Even with a single income, like,
let's say a spouse stays at home and the other one works. There is still a wealth multiplier there
because when you're not just focused on yourself, when you're single, you're just naturally
selfish. It's not a bad thing, but you only have to worry about you. You don't have to worry about the
kids and the wife. And when you get married, and especially when you have kids, which we're in
this season right now, it shifts your focus entirely from, I'm just trying to get by for me
and live my life versus I'm trying to provide. I'm trying to project for the future,
make sure my kids are good, that I'm leaving an inheritance to my children's children as
proverb says. Proverbs 13, 32. A good man leaves an inheritance to his children's children.
So now we're talking about generational wealth, and that causes you to make deeper sacrifices.
You're willing to forego things that you might have enjoyed in your youth.
The golf membership may turn into the college fund.
And that's, I think, a wonderful thing.
That's maturity and growth.
And I hope you can afford both.
You know, that's a good goal to like, yes, enjoy your life now.
But the truth is, if you aren't on the same page, so single people have the, here's their life hack, nobody's stopping them.
Nobody's dragging them down.
Because when you're married and you're not on the same page, it's nearly impossible to build wealth.
We get that call on the Ramsey show a whole lot.
How do I get my spouse on board?
They want to go into crippling debt.
I'm trying to get out.
Well, now you've got this tug of war.
What happens to most marriages when one person is financially, let's say, responsible and the other person is trying to spend, spend, and not try to save or invest at all?
What usually happens in that marriage or relationship?
Well, you create a chasm, and that chasm gets deeper and deeper until at some point you guys are
roommates. Yes, you're doing life together, but you're basically venmoing each other for bills.
And you have to untether at some point because otherwise they're going to drag you into the water
and you're going to drown. And so what happens a lot of the times the couples separate their
finances. They basically separate their life. They happen to live together. Maybe they're basically
co-parenting, but it's a really sad marriage. And the truth is, the spouse who's trying to better their
financial future is resentful. And the spouse who's not, it's probably guilty and they have some
shame. They might be resentful too, saying let's live our lives and let's buy this and let's spend
money. Dave Ramsey ruined our life. They drank the Kool-Aid and now they want to become dead free.
We used to have a fun life. What's wrong with a car payment? And so I've never seen it work out
where they call in and go, you know, you have the couples who say, we've had separate bank accounts for
35 years and we have a great marriage. Sure, that's one issue. And I still think you would have done
better had you combined your life entirely. Interesting. It's crazy. We're willing to combine a bed,
our DNA, make children together. And yet we're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, don't, you're not going to
look at my bank account. You've seen me naked, but please do not look at my bank account. That's just
wild behavior. What is that wound coming from when two intimate people who can have sex in the same
day of meeting each other and their first month to meet each other, but won't talk about money
and eventually after years won't align their money together.
What is that saying about the wound or the psychological challenge that that individual might be going through?
Yeah, I found there's a couple of buckets as to why someone is very hesitant to combine finances.
Number one is past hurt trauma baggage.
So there was a previous marriage around money?
Around money specifically.
So there was a previous marriage.
That spouse was out of control.
And now they're so fearful that they need to protect what's theirs.
So there's a fear element to it.
There's a shame element to it,
is if they knew how I spent my money,
they would not approve.
There's a control element to it.
You know, you see this a lot with narcissists.
They're not going to have any purview
into how I spend my money.
They're not going to tell me.
So there's all this fear, shame, control.
I mean, these are not good emotions
to be like filtering for your lens
of how you're going to handle money.
And what I found is at some point,
there's some,
what I call financial infidelity. And it's not always super malicious, but you find out one spouse
has been saving up. They got 20 grand over here. Meanwhile, you're trying to pay off your debt and you're
struggling. What is financial invality and why is it so harmful to a relationship? Financial infidelity
is where there is not full transparency and accountability in a relationship when it comes to money,
and that causes one spouse to do something behind the other's back. Sometimes maliciously,
Sometimes it's addiction.
That's another huge reason why couples are not willing to combine bank accounts.
There's an addiction there.
And once there's combined bank accounts, there's accountability.
And they don't want that.
They want to keep their vice.
And so that's a huge thing we see on the show.
Now, sometimes it's the most nefarious thing you can think of, right?
They're cheating.
We had a call.
This was so crazy.
This is one of the most craziest calls we've taken.
Rachel Cruz and I took this call.
This woman said, me and my husband, our finances are out of control.
great normal call so far
he shows up to the apartment complex with a new car
never told me he's got a car payment on it took out a big
loan never never even discussed it with me
and she goes and I'm no better I've got my own financial problems
and he goes on all these vacations doesn't tell me
and she goes in fact he's on one right now and I went I'm sorry what
she was yeah we said where like without you
I said that's not a thing weird and she'd say yeah he's on a cruise
and Rachel said, does he do these a lot?
She's like, he got a few more plan this year.
So now our ears are perked up.
And I go, Amy, they're married.
I think he's cheating on you.
Like, I didn't want to just tell her, but I had to imply.
And again, I don't know the full story, but you got to go, that's weird.
Here's the craziest part.
I said, do you ever go with him?
She said, well, I wanted to go on this one.
I told him I was going to book a ticket kind of jokingly.
Next day, he says, did you book it?
And she said, no, I didn't book it.
He said, good, I don't want you to go.
They're married.
This is a crate.
And they've got kids.
Wow.
And so these kind of calls break my heart.
And it starts with they never got aligned when it comes to money.
They were never on the same page.
And suddenly things are bad.
And that is the number one thing you've got to do before you ever put a ring on it.
Yes.
You've got to make sure that your money values are aligned.
More than anything else.
You can disagree on politics and still have a great life.
Even religion.
You could get by if one of you is.
Catholic and the other one, but money, that will destroy you.
Isn't that interesting?
I've seen couples who are like, one's Christian, one's Jewish, and they somehow work out.
Yeah.
I have seen people who like, okay, we have different sexual tendencies or whatever.
Like, we like, one person likes to have more sex than the other, and they still work it out.
But when money is not aligned, for whatever reason, there is so much friction that maybe they can
stay together for a long time, but just suffer.
And eventually it falls apart.
Why is money such a big indicator of the potential success of a relationship or the potential downfall of one?
Well, money number one is, you know, it's people like to quote the verse and saying, well, money's evil.
No, no, no.
The love of money is the root of all evil.
So it's this love, this greed, this like, I can't be satiated.
The discontentment is really at the root of that.
But money is so emotional.
It touches everything.
I mean, any goal you have, money is usually.
a part of that goal. Even something like starting a family, having kids, that's going to cost some
money to raise a kid, send them to college, maybe you want to cover the wedding. All of these
things affect your finances. Where you live, the kind of car you drive, everything that is
visual in this world that you experience, money is tied to it. And then the other thing is we all
have a way we grew up with money. Some of it was scarcity. So when you get some money, you're like,
oh my gosh, this is crazy. I'm so rich. I want to spend, spend, spend because, or you go,
I'm so tight because money was, even if you have $5 million, we get these calls and they go,
well, I grew up, poor. And now I'm scared to spend a dime because what if I go back to that?
Right. I had that fear. Yeah, it's a real fear. I was like, as I started to earn money,
I just was driven to earn more. It was like, when am I going to feel safe? Like, when's the bank
account going to be big enough where I feel like I'm not going to go broke? It took a while
for me to like breathe and not just,
sleep on a couch when I could afford to like get a hotel room. I was like holding on to it for years.
Yeah. I just saw a great Morgan Housel, who is a great author and in the personal finance space.
He said, psychology of money. Yeah, psychology money. Great book. And he said,
whatever the amount of money you have, you think you need double. So if you think you need $100,000,
or you have $100,000, you want $200,000. If you have a million, you want $2 million. And he said the
goalpost is always moving, which is so true. And I found this in the personal finance space.
There's some people doing really well.
They want more.
And so I go, what is at the root of that?
There's no actual values.
There's no actual goals other than I like to make money.
Yeah.
That's a scary premise for your wealth building.
Well, here's the thing, though.
You're making money.
Do you have a goal for how much money you want to make or have invested for a future retirement?
Oh, yeah.
Do you have that?
What's your number?
You know, as I've looked at it, there's the bare bones.
like I could lower my lifestyle, and this is what I love.
The more flexibility you have with this, the bigger the range, and you go, well, I could make this work on a million.
Sure.
And if I had 10 million, I'd figure out a way to spend it.
But the truth is, you know, there's always something fun and new to buy, you know, a property, a vacation home, a more generosity.
And so I do find that when I was in my 20s, a million dollars was like, I made it.
I could retire.
And this is nothing to do with inflation.
This is just like your prefrontal cortex.
That's the number.
Yeah, yeah.
And the truth is, a lot of people have a million dollars saving a retirement or less,
and they have very wonderful lives.
You know, they're not doing anything lavish,
but they could survive off of that for the rest of their life and be okay.
That's a real scenario.
And so for me, I found, like, the $2 million mark for a millennial,
knowing that, you know, 20, 30 years from now, I want to be work optional.
$2 million is like, that's a good baseline I found.
Two million at 65?
In your 50s even.
In your 50s, yeah.
Yeah.
Because you don't, you know, I'm assuming I'm going to live a long full life.
God willing, you know, in the creek don't rise, that I'll live in my 90s.
Because when you look at the actual mortality rates and you look at the how long people are actually living in America today, the average age is like 78.
But that's factoring in infant mortality and, you know, cancer.
But if you make it to your 60s and you're in good health, there's a great chance you're going to go into your 90s.
Wow.
barring anything crazy happening.
Yeah.
And so too many people aren't planning for that 30, 40 year retirement.
Because they're going, well, if I died 78, I retire 65, I need a decade.
I'll be good.
Or even scarier, my kids will take care of me.
And now we see the sandwich generation.
And Gen X is experiencing this.
What's the sandwich generation?
Well, they're trying to raise their kids and save for college and cover their own financial world
while taking care of mom and dad.
And so they are stuck in the middle of this sandwich.
And mom and dad, I mean, we get this call a lot. They got nothing. There's no, maybe a tiny pension,
maybe some social security. Average social security payment is now $2,000. It was only meant to
replace 40% of income. And too many people went, well, the government will take care of me in my old
age. And that's, those are the most heartbreaking calls. Because unless you can continue working,
there's not a lot you can do when you're in your 60s and 70s to recoup from not saving for retirement.
like we talked about earlier with that chart.
You know what, at 60, you might turn that dollar into a $1.60 from 60 to 65.
You're not even going to double your money.
Not much.
And so you really need to get started early.
And back to the original point, money is so emotional.
And when you don't have it, it is like oxygen.
You need it to survive.
And then once you have it, it can become a tool to help you live out your values and goals.
But devoid of those values and goals, it is a never-ending chase.
It is hell.
And I've heard you argue that getting out of debt isn't just a math problem.
It's a behavior problem.
So what is the identity shift that someone has to make before any budget or plan will actually
start to stick for them?
The mindset shift they need to make is that they are not a financial genius.
Too many people go, well, I'm going to try it my way.
And I go, hey, how about try it the way that millions of people have done first?
If that doesn't work, if you hate that, you can try it.
your way. And the truth is we don't want to submit ourselves to someone else's plan. And we wanted to feel
like it was our idea that we have control of it. And so when I gave up control to say, maybe I'm not
the smartest guy in the room, maybe I should listen to this guy Dave Ramsey who's helped millions
of people before me get out of debt. I'll try it. And so that's what I did. I was 40 grand in debt when I
started at Ramsey. They're 23 years old. Student, mostly student loans, some credit cards,
because I opened them to get my sky miles and cash back, thinking this is the plan. Build your credit
score. Go into a little bit of debt. Get some miles. American Dream. Bada bade a boom. Get your
degree. A little did I know, I wouldn't be making $40,000 out of college. And so here I am going,
how am I going to pay this off? And then I went through Financial Peace University, which is our
flagship money course. And I followed the debt snowball method, which says, hey, forget interest rate.
We are not trying to be mathematical geniuses here. We're going to focus on the smallest balance
first. And that gives you a quick win. Because you can knock out the $1,000 balance way faster
than the $10,000 balance, regardless of interest rate. And so that gives you an actual psychological
win that causes momentum. That's the behavior shift that needs to happen. And if you just want to focus
on math, you're going to have a real hard time getting out of debt because it's really not about math.
And we see this on the debt-free stage. People lose 100 pounds on their debt-free journey.
And the reason is it's a transformation game.
Yes.
When you make a sacrifice and you see a result, you then go, where else could I implement this?
Yeah, in every area of life.
And I feel like, for whatever reason, you might have a stat on this.
But in the last five years, I'm assuming debt has just increased so much by individuals.
First with COVID and kind of the free money that people got and just spending online all day and whatever, they probably just stayed in that process.
Yeah, we were over $18 trillion in just consumer debt.
Really?
It's pretty wild.
What is the average debt of an American today, do we know?
Yeah.
If you have debt, the average is about 40,000 in the consumer debt, and then about 100,000
once you factor in mortgages and kind of all kinds of debts.
40,000 in like credit card debt?
That's all kinds of debts combined.
So that's your, you know, the average, if you added up their cars or credit cards
and took the average of that.
But, I mean, we're seeing the numbers continually go up.
We're at 1.67 trillion in auto loans.
That's a record.
1.66 in student loans.
Oh my gosh.
Another record.
1.3 trillion in credit card debt as a nation.
That's a record.
What happens to a nation when 1.6 trillion in credit card debt turns into 10 trillion in credit card debt?
What happens to individuals and a nation?
We point fingers at the president and say someone needs to do something about this.
Inflation's out of control.
Wife's clean of our debt, right?
Yeah, because as prices go up, the problem with debt is,
is it makes it more palatable to, you know, take in that amount.
So new cars now are almost 50 grand.
Average new car payment is $750.
Holy moly.
Now, if we said, hey, you can't use debt to buy cars.
What would happen to car prices?
They'd go down because nobody's willing to spend $50,000 on a car.
Or you just buy used cars.
Exactly.
Same thing happened with college tuition.
Why did it skyrocket faster than almost anything else?
because colleges realize all these loans are backed by the government.
Parents and families will continue to just take these out like monopoly money.
We can raise prices and no one's going to care.
That's the scariest part about debt.
It's sort of, it's like, you know, you're boiling the crab here,
and you don't realize it's too late until it's over.
And you're already in crippling debt.
And so that's the biggest mindset shift you can make is to just take debt off the table
and say, I'm only going to buy things I can afford,
the exclusion being your mortgage.
Obviously, you know, a $300, $400,000 house, very few people are going to have the foresight to go save cash for that.
It happens.
Yeah, that's hard.
But it's fewer far between.
So mortgage is the only one we won't yell at you at.
But every other type of debt is avoidable if you're willing to have that delayed gratification.
And I know you drove a $4,000 car.
I was in the car.
Now, you could have went out and got a $20,000 car with the payment.
This gets me from A to B.
Why do I need to spend all this money when I...
Exactly.
It had a 1997 Cadillac Eldorado Barrettes.
It's a pretty sweet.
It was nice, but it had no radio.
It had no AC.
It had no Bluetooth.
So it didn't have the conveniences of, you know, I had to entertain myself.
No car play?
No car play.
Oh, my goodness.
No flat screen TV in the front there, but it got me wherever I needed to go.
Yeah.
Well, that's good.
You were secure and you knew you're not trying to impress everyone else.
I wasn't trying to.
And I was like, I'm using this whatever, $500 or $800.
car payment a month that I would be putting into a car payment plus insurance plus whatever else
into my investments every month. That was going automatically into my investment account and it was
building for my future self to say thank you. And I want to be, I want to look in the mirror
at 50 and 60 and be like look back on my younger self and say thank you for not spending all that
money on that stupid thing that you want a couple years later anyways. Yeah. You know like thank you for setting
us up for success. Now look at this rich family life we have. You know, not just financially,
but a rich life where we get to take adventures and create memories from experiences and trips
and travel the world or whatever we want to do because of you at 25 and 30. Thank you. I want to
look back and say thank you to my ear yourself. Yeah. And that's some vision casting. You've got to think
about what the 10-year-out version of you is going to be proud of versus regret. And so it's a
pretty good filter to go, you know, if I can just avoid financial regrets at 25, I'm going to be
okay when it comes to building. Now, I've still made some regrets. You know, I'm still a risky guy.
You know, it's like, let me roll the dice on this project and see if it works. Yeah.
But you can take more meaningful calculated risks because you've set yourself up.
I have a goal for how much automatically is going away every month for a future goal.
Yes.
So it's like, all right, if I'm going to buy some expensive lattes every day because I've automatically saved and invested the amount that I want to, that's on me.
I'm going to live my life how I want and how I choose, right?
You know, I'm not going to be like Graham Stephan.
I'm going to have sushi.
I'm going to enjoy the sushi and not save until I'm 60 to eat sushi.
He'll get it paid for it.
He'll do like a sponsored post and get the meal covered.
But that's true.
you know, when it comes to that, the budget is what freed me on that. Like, everyone thinks the budget
is some, you know, straight jacket mechanism for people who want to be tightwads. The budget allowed
me to go, no, I budgeted for the frivolous coffee purchase every couple of days. And I budgeted
to invest 500 bucks into my kids' college fund. And so once you actually create the budget,
it frees you. It's permission to spend. Then there's no guilt or shame because you plan for it.
Zero. And you're like, man, I'm automatically saving and investing every month. I can do whatever I want.
with this money. Exactly. This is my money to do anything. Being intentional allows you to be more
impulsive when it's in the budget. You kind of sort of have your impulsive line item. I like that.
But the financial system right now, I feel like it's designed to keep people in debt between
credit cards, loans, and the buy now pay later offers. What would you say then is the biggest
debt trap that people are falling into right now? Buy Now Pay Later has skyrocketed and it's scary
how many people are using it. It's over one in four America.
Americans use Buy Now Pay Later. One in five are using it to cover groceries. Oh no. It used to be the
frivolous entertainment. I can't afford the laptop. TV. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. The furniture, the appliance,
that's the old school. And now people are just using it to live and just adding it to the tab.
And what's really scary is that 40% have been late on their Buy Now Pay Later payment, which then
triggers the fees, the interest. And the craziest part to me is not even the interest in fees.
it's how much more it causes you to spend.
And there's data on this.
Klarna will brag to retailer saying,
hey, put Klarna under your cart
and it will add up to 40% for your order size.
Come on.
On average.
40% more.
Because think about it.
Lewis is buying $100 pair of jeans.
Well, I see this buy now, pay later.
Now it's just $25 today.
And I can do the other $25
two weeks from now, another four weeks from now.
So what happens?
And now your cart went down to $25.
We can add some more stuff.
to the cart. And so you don't feel it. Again, to my original point, it's become so frictionless to
spend money and it's exactly how companies like it. And so you have to add friction back into your life
by saying, I'm not even going to have my debit card info tied to that account, let alone my credit
card info. I'm going to not have any of these buy now, pay later apps on my phone that are
going to tempt me to go spend more. And you have the value. Your identity is I'm a guy who doesn't
borrow money. I'm a guy who pays for things in full.
who saves up over time and I'm really intentional.
And once you do that, it's become real easy for me to not go into debt.
For someone who has been in credit card debt, student loan debt, deferred their debts for
later dates for a long time, and that has been their identity based on their behaviors.
How do they shift their identity overnight or over time to be a completely different
identity and not be a person who goes into debt?
because it's a behavior.
It's a mindset that they've had that they've embodied.
Maybe it wasn't by choice originally.
Maybe they made a poor decision financially and it just snowballed the wrong way.
But because of that action or that circumstance, it has become their identity.
How do they shift the internal identity first so that they stop making those choices externally?
There's a humility that comes first of going, hey, maybe I'm not the smartest guy in the room.
Maybe the way I've been doing it, even though it's normal, isn't actually optimal from
my financial future. And then the other piece of this is you've got to decide what kind of person
you're going to be. Are you going to be a person who just always has a payment because that's what
your parents told you and society told you? Or are you going to kind of swim upstream? And I just talked to
a bunch of college students yesterday, Arizona State University, largest public university. And it was
scary to me how many of them had some student loan debt, had some card debt, had some credit card
debt and they were so nonchalant. They were like, well, I'd rather see the money in savings than
pay down the debt. Not that exciting to pay down the debt. Very exciting to see my savings grow.
But they're not realizing there's a false sense of security when you're hanging on to debt
while having some savings builds. It's not real money. Exactly. When you owe a lender $40,000
and you got $10,000 in the bank, the math says you're broke. And that's the scary part is you
have to realize I can do so much better if I invested this car payment.
instead of gave it to Toyota lending for the rest of my life.
So that's the math I do with college students, especially the young people.
I pull up my investment calculator.
I go to Ramsey Solutions.com.
I plug in the numbers and go, what's your car payment?
500 bucks a month?
Great.
Let's pop that in.
If you keep carrying a car payment and just trade in the car, get another car,
500 bucks a month, maybe even more,
you are missing out on a million to 2 million plus that you would have had,
without even investing, just trading the car payment.
One of our team members here is a younger team member.
He doesn't have a car yet.
And he lives very close and he walks here.
And he's like, I'm thinking about getting a car.
I go, you know, do what you want.
But don't get a car for as long as you can because you can walk or take the subway or the bus and just invest that money at 23, 24, 25.
Like, I get it.
You might need a car eventually to be able to get around the town or something.
But what would life look like if you didn't have a car for the next few years?
Yeah, if you can get by without it.
What would life look like?
And maybe it's not as convenient.
Maybe you've got to take a couple Ubers here and there,
or you've got to take the bus,
and it takes a little more time,
or you take the subway,
or you ask a friend for a ride,
or you get a bike.
I have a friend that doesn't own a car.
He has a bike.
He goes all around the city.
He says it's faster because...
That tracks.
In L.A., that definitely tracks.
Because of the traffic, he says it's faster.
His kids go in the back in his bike.
He goes everywhere in a bike in L.A.
And he's in great shape, too.
Great shape.
He knows all the bike lanes.
He's got the app that tells you where to go to save time.
And it's like for 10 years, his name's Michael Schneider.
He hasn't had a car in L.A.
He goes to the airport in his bike and leaves it at the airport.
Chains it up at the airport.
At the airport, everything.
And he goes, it's created freedom in my life.
Financial freedom also, but also just I'm outside.
I see nature.
I'm choosing to go places intentionally.
I get a workout, all these things.
Like the minimalist.
It's kind of that simplicity mindset of just how can I do more with less.
Yes.
And even to cars, the car is,
just the first portion of buying the car. Then you got gas, maintenance, the insurance. I mean,
we get calls on the Ramsey show. They go, well, my car payment's $1,000, but the insurance is $300,
then gas was costing them $1,400 a month. Because it's one of these gas guzzlers.
$2,500 a month right there. Exactly. Imagine putting $2,500 a month into your investment account.
That's how to shift that once you go. You need to get angry. And to your point, you said,
what is it going to cause someone's mindset to shift who is carrying that debt? It's anger and pain.
that's got to be the catalyst because you know this I want to be in as good as shape as you
but I'm not a point in my life where I'm so out of shape that I'm angry enough that it's painful
enough that big enough pain yeah that's why we're inspired when someone drops 150 pounds if I drop
10 pounds you would barely notice you know what I mean and so that's where there needs to be enough
pain and so what I try to do in the Ramsey show and when I'm talking to people is pull the rubber
band back to make them feel that pain because we've been desensitized we're really good at a
avoiding pain, even when it's there.
Gosh.
We've got so many vices in our life and distractions and, you know, anti-bortem devices.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
We never have to actually experience our pain.
We don't even know the amount of debt we're in.
We're not going to look at the credit report or the bank account because that's negative energy.
And so when you're actually forced to deal with the reality, that causes some pain.
Now we can start somewhere.
Yeah.
What is the one thing people buy to look rich that actually guarantees they'll stay poor?
Oh, man. I mean, the car is the most glaring. The house is the biggest. That's the biggest purchase that people buy as the like, I've made it. And you see this a lot. The scariest part is this happens with high earners. Six-figure earners, they have the hardest time downgrading their lifestyle because now you have to live the six-figure life. You've got to have a nicer house. You've got to have a nicer car. And if you live in a crappy neighborhood with a beater car, people go, wow, I thought they were doing well. Apparently not. Or it's again, self-fing.
imposed or they go, well, I feel like I need to prove to myself that I've made it. So it all goes
back to that insecurity. And when you're secure and yourself, you're self-aware, you know who you're
who you are, what your identity is, what values you have around money, that to me, like, that person
is going to build wealth, whether they make $50,000 or $500,000. Because otherwise, you can make
all the money in the world. And if you're insecure with no self-awareness, with no real values or
goals, just kind of untethered, you're going to go spend it all.
That's so interesting.
So if you're emotionally or psychologically insecure, you're going to be financially insecure as well, it sounds like.
Either making poor financial decisions to look more successful or more secure or just not having the confidence in yourself to go earn money based on your lack of worth.
Yeah. It's funny because I was, I'm not saying I had it all figured out money-wise.
I definitely had my money challenges.
but I was so happy living in a two-bedroom apartment until I was 40 years old.
It might sound weird, but it's like I didn't need more.
I was also never married.
So I was like, why buy a house?
Do you need a five-bedroom house right now?
I don't need this.
And I was like, I don't want to start a home, like a three-bedroom home.
Just to say you have a home.
Yeah, I didn't need that.
I was like, let me just invest.
I live fine in a two-bedroom apartment.
No, I had a nice two-bedroom apartment and I upgraded.
It wasn't a dump.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
But I didn't need that to flex and I didn't need a nice car to flex the only reason I bought a new car was for like a tax purpose for the business eventually
Otherwise I had my four thousand dollar car for years and
And then I was like all right. I think I want like GPS, you know I want like radio. That was essentially what it was
But until then I was happy in a two-bedroom apartment a four thousand dollar car in my late 30s Wow, and that was fine you know what I found out that
that this, and this is something I'm guilty of.
Once you go to a certain level,
you can never go back.
And the best example I have is curing.
So I drank curing in college, right?
I had the curing coffee machine.
That was my college go-to.
And then I found out about the aeropress.
Now I'm making espresso, making lattes.
Oh, you're like, man, I'm like a...
And now I'm like a...
And now I want, wow, I can't drink the curig anymore.
Now I have a fancy coffee machine.
I get single origin beans and I grind them fresh
in my barraza encore, you know?
Yeah, you're a barista.
And now I go to a hotel with a curing,
and I go, oh, I can never drink that.
And I found out this crazy, this is what I realized, it's an epiphany.
Maybe someone else has figured this out.
The happiest people are the ones who can drink a curing happily.
Yes.
I'm jealous now.
Or even powdered coffee, instant coffee, just put it in some water.
I used to judge them and say, wow, have some class, have some taste.
And now I just look at them and go, must be nice.
Must be nice.
It must be free.
Yes.
Psychologically, you're free from needing it to be a certain way.
So now translate that to the financial world.
Oh, man.
Now I'm jealous of the person who has a simple life, the car that gets from A to B,
yeah, it's got a little fender bender here and there.
It's not the prettiest.
And they are happy as a clam because they're debt-free.
They bought themselves freedom by avoiding the debt.
And too many people- By not paying for anything.
Exactly.
They bought themselves freedom by not overspending.
So realize that once you get that nice brand-new car, you're going to have a real hard time
ever buying a used car again.
It's going to feel like a real downshift.
No, I can't do it now.
It's so hard.
That's human nature.
You know, maybe I could with a car because I just don't care enough.
But I have a Tesla that I really love.
I'm just like, just so comfortable in.
Yeah.
But I'm like, okay.
That's true.
I can't go.
I'll never not be able to have a Tesla anymore.
Electric, man.
It changed my life.
Well, the self-driving changed my life.
It's...
I realized how little I enjoy driving once it did it for me.
And it's just better than you.
Yes.
It's better.
It's better.
It's better than you.
100% of the time watching versus my human brain.
It's a superior machine.
It is.
It's unbelievable.
It's hard to go back to like the Stone Ages.
When I drive my wife's car now, I'm angry.
I'm like, oh, gosh, you have to hit the pedal on my own?
I have to hit the brake.
This is insane.
And so that's a great analogy for just human evolution and our standards.
And so that's why it breaks my heart when people live beyond their means.
They have the hardest time ratcheting down.
If you're going in debt to go beyond your means, it's going to be really hard to go back to a level you're not comfortable with.
Yeah.
Versus someone who's like making 45 grand.
who's not living above their means,
but they're just having a hard time getting by,
I could help that person all day long.
Gosh, you know what?
When I was in high school, my mom bought me a $1,000 car.
It was like, what was it?
It was a Honda Prelude, and it was probably 1993 or something like that.
It was a stick shift.
It was a two-door.
It was so beaten down.
But it was like the coolest thing for me to just be like,
I'm driving my stick shift,
a little two-door car.
I was happy in that car, a thousand-dollar car.
It only lasted for like a year and a half.
But it was like, this gets me to school back.
I can go, like, see my friends.
It was the coolest thing.
Isn't it funny how you look back at that nostalgia with, like, joy?
You're like, that was when I may have been my happiest.
Because you were living the simplest.
I mean, now I was struggling and psychologically and relationships
and all these other areas in my life.
Sure, you didn't have the maturity.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But from that $1,000 car, I was like, this is the coolest thing ever.
So maybe I could go back and have like, I mean, listen, I could do anything if I had to.
But, you know, if I was going to buy a used car that was like maybe a stick shift, like truck or something just to have something to get me around.
Maybe it's like, all right, cool, I can enjoy this.
That's the new thing that was we want to go back to the old school analog, like add friction back in.
I want it to be difficult to drive the car.
You think people really want that?
I'm getting all this content fed to me of homesteading.
My wife really wants to have, like, land.
You're like living Tennessee.
You're probably essentially homesteading yourself.
You know, it's like you guys live in Tennessee.
You're got like the...
My friend Dr. John Deloney, that's like his thing.
His body is he wants to just have a ton of land,
be able to live off the fat of the land, have the garden.
And it's this idea of having, you know,
a little piece of land, a few acres,
having your own animals, chickens,
growing your own food,
and living off grid
where you don't need to spend money on a car
on rent, on electricity, on utilities,
the chaos of society.
Exactly.
You don't have to be bought into the machine, right?
You can just...
Save your money, invest it so you can buy your piece of land and live off grid.
What do you think of that lifestyle?
I feel like it's coming back or I'm just being fed this content that more people are doing it
because they don't want to be spending so much of their time making money to pay bills.
Yeah.
They want to be spending their time with their kids, teaching their kids,
tending to their animals and their land, having quality time, making bonfires,
playing board games, and living that dream.
what do you think about that life or people wanting to go back to that way of living versus the conveniences of life?
I think most people love the idea of it.
I think they would hate the reality of it.
How hard it is.
I think it gets old real quick and how much sacrifice it actually takes.
I mean, go ask a farmer.
You're like, I don't want to live on a farm.
Do you know what time they're up?
Yeah.
Do you know how much they're working during that day just to like get by and survive and tend to the fields and the crops and the animals and the cattle?
it's an insane amount of work. So the homesteading became popular on Instagram. And so then you find
out, well, it's kind of a farce because they had all this family money and they kind of started
the trend. And you're like, okay, so you need $5 million to own all this land, build something
beautiful on it and then maintain it with help and labor because you're not going to do it all
yourself. So it's a little bit of a fantasy. But the idea behind it is I want to get out of the noise.
I want to get out of the chaos, the consumerist culture, the grind, the treas.
That part I relate to.
I think we're just jumping to the most extreme thing.
The pendulum swinging so hard because we're so exhausted by this life we've created for ourselves.
Where do you feel like it's going to be by 2030?
You know, I keep hearing about this 2030 agenda.
You know, no one's going to own anything and be happy.
The great reset.
The reset.
They've been saying this since 2020, right?
It's like the people guessing the last day of the earth, like of the apocalypse.
Right, right, right.
And like, oh, we miscalculated.
It'll be three years from now.
So nobody knows.
Only the Lord knows when it's all coming down.
I live by life.
But in terms of the financial situation, yeah, not like the world.
They're saying there's going to be a crash and it's too good to be true.
There's a bubble with AI.
And, you know, there's all kinds of financial institutions going, hey, the market's not going to be good the next decade.
It's going to be a row rough and tumble.
But then it always comes back.
Well, you look back, what were they saying a decade ago?
Same thing.
No one predicted where we'd be today.
And so I think there's a lot of pessimism, and that's what gets clicks.
If you went, hey, the market's going to continue to do great.
Keep on, keeping on.
I'm tuned out now.
There's not much you can say there.
But you can dig all day long into how terrible things are going to be.
So I'm a glass-half-full kind of guy when it comes to the future, the economy.
Everyone thinks, you know, everything's inflated in the stock market right now because of
AI and technology.
And I'm like, what if you're wrong and AI actually bolsters the stock market for the next decade?
And we'd see, you know, we saw returns like 25% up, 23% up, 17% up in the last three years.
Wow. And then people go, George, you always say 10% returns. Nobody's getting that.
Mike, you're right. If you've been in actually investing, you'd notice it's been more like 17, 20, 23, 25% the last couple years.
Yeah, but if you average it over the next 40 years, if you get 10%, that's amazing.
Exactly. And that's what we've seen. I mean, there's more up years than down years in the stock market.
If you go look at the charts. And there's not a whole lot of years where there's a crash like 2,000.
And there's a whole lot of years where it's up 10, 12, even 20%.
And so I'm not like a pie in the sky guy.
I like to look at the data to inform what could happen in the future.
What does true financial freedom look like to you?
I think it comes down to peace for me.
Because you see a lot of people with billions of dollars who have no peace in their lives.
They don't have good relationships.
Their family doesn't like them.
And so when you think financial freedom is just a number, you have missed the mark completely.
It is so much more than that.
And so financial freedom is, do I have to do what I'm doing to get by?
Or do I have options?
So it's option, it's margin, it's the freedom, it's the flexibility to go live where you want to live, do what you want to do without being beholden to payments or a paycheck.
So yes, once your assets can replace your income, that technically is financial freedom.
Because you technically have that passive, you know, I'm going to call it passive income.
Sometimes you're working. If it's real estate, nothing passive about it.
You're working to manage it.
Exactly. But if it's in the stock market, if it's in an index fund that spits off 10% on a given year,
and that replaces your expenses for the year. And that's why living on less you make is so important.
Because if you make a million dollars, but you only spend $100,000, well, when there's a shift,
in the economy, you have total freedom. When you have cash in the bank to cover one to two years
of your expenses, you're never going to worry about selling off your stocks the worst time in the stock
market. So to me, financial freedom is creating that level of peace in every corner of your
life so that you can be healthier in every corner of your life. What's this idea of the
doom loop? What is the biggest doom loop you see keeping people broke right now in 2026?
So Dr. Arthur Brooks was on my YouTube channel and he was talking about the doom loop as far as, you know, it was more about addiction in that regard.
But then we connected it to money and it was fascinating to see the sort of hedonic treadmill of payments and emotional spending.
So we see this a lot with retail therapy.
It's a great example.
You go out and the most exciting thing is the process of the purchase.
The next most exciting thing is when you get the purchase.
and then the diminishing returns, it like skyrockets down.
So what happens?
You feel guilty about making the purchase because it was likely impulsive.
It was more than you should have spent.
It was on a credit card or buy now, pay later.
So what do you do when you are anxious, guilty, feeling shame?
Well, now I'm going to doodash a $30 burrito to eat my feelings
and then go buy more stuff to get that neck to dopamine hit.
So that's what it's all about, is we get addicted to the dopamine hit,
whether it's sports betting or the prediction markets or retail therapy, choose your poison,
alcohol, whatever the thing is, whatever you do the most, you need then more of it to keep up.
And so that creates this doom loop that Dr. Arthur Brooks talks about.
And it's so prevalent in the money world across the world.
I mean, if you look at all of the most popular trends that are hurting people, sports betting,
prediction markets, pornography, alcohol, gambling, gambling apps, buy now, pay later.
All of it is cyclical and causes you to go get more of that thing.
None of it is like, hey, I got it.
I'm good.
It's, hey, come back in.
And now because it's on my phone, they can mark it to me.
It's a new notification saying, hey, 17 of your friends just bet on this thing.
Do you want to get it on it?
So now there's socialized peer pressure on top of technological addiction.
And then we're wondering why we're all broke, miserable, and anxious.
Do you think the polymarket is a really bad thing?
I haven't, I've like been seeing people talk about it.
I haven't been on there.
But what is this?
What is this?
And do you think it's a bad thing, the polymarket?
Yeah, I'm, I'm going to go as far to say it's a cancer on society.
Wow.
It is like everything that is wrong with the world put into one terrible product.
Because what's happening is you're getting a lot of, especially young men who already aren't doing great as far as their vices.
And so now they've marketed this thing to be like, well, it's not.
gambling. You're just sort of predicting on a future event. You're hedging your bets against the
future, but it's not gambling. And the companies will even tell you that. The CEOs, I mean,
John Oliver just did a great deep dive on prediction markets that is well worth the watch.
And he broke this down. And what happens is these companies have doubled in valuation
every year or two because everyone's cashing in on it. So now CNN's got the Kalshi sponsored,
you know, predictions down at the bottom of the screen the whole time. And so,
So now it's normalized.
And when something gets normalized, like we've seen with, you know, you name it, legalized dispensaries or gambling apps.
As, you know, Supreme Court said, hey, states can decide.
What does every state decide?
We want that money.
Let's open it up.
So now you have especially young men.
There's an epidemic of young men that are glued to this thing.
And they are going, hey, I'm going to bet if Donald Trump's going to burp today.
I'm going to put 200 bucks on that.
And now there's people streaming.
They make their money by streaming.
by streaming themselves following these predictions.
Really?
Yes.
It is insane how far it's gotten.
It's like you used to be streaming video games.
Okay, if you're into that, that's great.
Now they're streaming if they made money or not on their predictions.
They're just waiting all day just saying, okay, we're waiting for the news to break if someone, if this happens.
How do they even know if this thing actually happens?
They'll like live stream the C-SPAN, you know, show to see what they say.
I mean, how do they know if some of these things actually do happen, like this, I don't know, burping thing?
like to say. Like, how do they even know? Well, it's all algorithms and computers tracking it all.
And here's what's crazy. The top 1% are getting 84% of the profits. Top 1% on these prediction markets.
How are they getting that? So there's, very few people are actually making a profit is what's happening. And the stats are crazy. I mean, there's 44 billion made in predictions. Like, that's the pool of money. These companies made $256 million last year just in.
profits from people losing their money. I mean, so it's, it's no better than Vegas. And in a lot of
ways, it's worse because it's so normalized, socialized, and it's in your palm, 24-7, you can bet on
anything happening. It's not gambling. It's not considered gambling legally, is what they're saying.
Exactly. So they've avoided taxes. They've avoided a whole lot of things by convincing
everyone that it's not gambling. Where do you see these prediction markets playing out over the next
five to ten years.
Like in terms of individuals spending money on these things over the next five to ten years.
I'm not a betting man, but I would bet that it gets worse.
If you had to put a prediction on the market.
20 bucks.
It's going to be better or worse.
I think it's going to be very similar to buy now, pay later, where these companies grow and grow and grow.
There's more competition.
The industry grows as a whole.
Now it's, you know, just like Fandul and BetMGM just integrated themselves into the media.
We're going to see that.
already seeing it. CNN and CNBC, they're already weaving that in. Hey, Polymarket said this and
Kalshi said this and they're choosing which one you're going to partner with. And now these companies
are making a lot of money by including this into their broadcasts. Is all money made good money
made? Ooh. Are there unscrupulous profiteers? What is the psychology
and the what happens in the mind and the nervous system of a human being when they make money in a certain way where they know maybe that's not the best way or maybe it's not in my my value system or maybe I've had to shift my value system to justify making this whether it be through drugs and alcohol through sex through porn through selling their bodies through gambling through prediction market whatever it is something that's out of alignment with their core
values or they've had to shift constantly their value system to make sense of how they've made
money. Is all money made good money made? Absolutely not. I tell you that because the calls we get
on the Ramsey show, we get people who are, they're questioning, hey, how do I leave this field?
I don't feel good about it. And it's not even as nefarious as that. It's, I sell whole life insurance
or I'm a car salesman. And now that I'm debt free, I don't want to feel like I'm a part of this system
that's putting people into crippling debt.
And so the good news is there's a huge financial industry out there.
A lot of it is debt-related.
But there's a lot of great pockets where you can't actually help people and know that it's not
hurting them and that it's not about your commission.
Yet you were a sort of fiduciary.
You're doing what's in their best interest versus what's best for your own pocket.
And that's where I think if it's eating away at you, that's your body telling you,
this is not the job for you.
So that's not a judgment on whatever job you have.
But if you're a person who says, this is my identity, this is the moral values I have, the political values, whatever it is, when there's that cognitive dissonance, that will eat away at your soul.
So there's a soul tax to be paid.
And the longer you're staying that job, the harder it's going to be to recover.
And so I always encourage people, do something where you sleep well at night, knowing you actually help people.
Otherwise, you have to either justify it of why it's good or you have to make peace with it.
And making peace with it is way harder.
Yeah.
Do you believe the American Dream is dead?
If your American Dream is owning a private jet, yes, the American Dream is dead.
That's the bar we've set for ourselves of what the American Dream is.
You know, it used to be like, you know, a house, two and a half kids, white picket fence, a car.
And now we're mad.
That was the boomers generation.
We're all angry at them for ruining everything.
So now the New American Dream for a lot of people,
I think a healthier one is debt freedom.
Like we're all aiming at freedom and peace now, which is the healthiest version.
The most unhealthy version of the American dream is get rich quick.
I got to step on everyone else to get to where I want to go.
And at the end of it, you go, okay, the goal is to make a lot of money.
If you pulled 18 to 25 year olds and said, what is your goal in life?
Make a lot of money.
I mean, that's the most viral call I did on the Ramsey show.
We uploaded to TikTok.
18-year-old who said, how do I turn 100,000 into a million by the time I'm 25? And I went, okay, so
you're 18, 20, so seven years, you want to turn 100,000, so you need $900,000 in growth,
or make that much in seven years. So I asked him, why? He said, I don't know, it was just a question.
As soon as I poked one, a hole in it, he got spooked, but he had no real goal other than,
here's what he was really saying. I'm scared if I don't have a million by 25, it's too
for me to ever build wealth. Wow. That my life is going to suck if I don't have a million
dollars by 25. So the American dream, the definition is squishy now. And depending on who you
ask, the American dream is to make $100,000 or it's to make $10 million. And so you need to
set that bar for yourself, but you need to do it for the right reasons. And it all goes back to
how secure are you? What are you actually aiming for? You have a family? Because that changes
your goal significantly versus the young single guy who just wants to make a
a lot of money and live a lavish life. And you can go read Ecclesiastes. Guy named Solomon tried it.
Richest guy in history had it all. And he went, everything is meaningless at the end.
He said, eat, drink, be married. Yes, have a good time, but know that none of this really matters
in the end. And I was like, that's a, that's a mic drop that I think a lot of young people need to hear.
And you hear rich people say it all the time, right? Money's not everything. And they go, I'd like to
find out for myself. Easy for you to say. Easy for money. Yeah, as you sit on your yacht,
One of your many, you know, and so that's the hard part is you kind of need to experience.
How do young people believe older people who have money when they say money is not everything?
It's just angering to them.
They don't want to hear from someone who has it.
Right.
And so that, and that's again where life experience comes into play.
You kind of have to get a taste of it of the thing that you want to realize it's not going to fulfill you.
I'll tell you what, money has, hasn't been the reason I,
I am fulfilled, but it adds a lot of fulfillment.
Yes.
It adds a lot of fulfillment.
Because you've used it as a tool.
Because I've used it as a tool.
And being broke wasn't enjoyable either.
You know, being broke wasn't fun and fulfilling.
But when I was broke and I found a way to create joy in my life, I was happy.
I didn't want to be broke, but I found a way to be happy.
And I think that was interesting.
I was like, oh, I can enjoy life.
with very little and I can still have a great time and have these adventures and have this sense of freedom where I can just jump on a bus and go across the country and like try this new thing and
It cost me 50 bucks. I don't have anywhere to go, but I can do something adventurous like that that idea of wonder
Was enriching in my life. Yeah
Once I flipped the interpretation of where I was at my life when I was like oh, I don't need to be
rich in order to have a good time I can do free things
and create cool moments in my life.
Now, it didn't mean I wanted to stay poor.
I didn't want to stay broke, but I definitely-
Yeah, it's not a virtue to say I'm gonna stay broke forever.
No, no, I didn't want that.
I was also scared because I didn't know how to make money,
and I didn't understand money.
I didn't have the knowledge or the emotional intelligence around money.
So I was scared of money.
So it took me some time to like really start researching
and having a language around money and having conversations around it
and asking questions.
around it to where it felt more accessible for me to earn.
I had to learn how to develop internal value and self-worth so that I could receive money.
And I think that was a process for me.
But I'll tell you what, having money and earning money has created more value and confidence
in me to enjoy life.
But I think, I don't think I would have been fulfilled had I not learned how to also create
inner peace in the journey.
Exactly.
Because there's a lot of people who have a lot of money who are stressed out and overwhelmed
all day.
And the poor person saying, well, I'd rather have that rich guy's life or gal's life and
be stressed than be poor and stressed.
Yeah.
There's an argument for that.
But there's also an immense pressure and immense that I've seen wealthy people who are
internally sick have, where they commit.
horrible actions in life, they do really bad things with the money, they commit suicide because
they don't know how to handle it emotionally and psychologically. And so if you are internally
sick and have a financial abundance, that's not a good combination. Yeah. And so it's learning how to have
freedom and peace is what I heard from you. That is really American dream. If you can have
inner freedom and inner peace and be debt free and then learn how to create a financial
freedom for yourself, whatever that number is for you, then you can create that fulfillment
of life with it as well.
Exactly.
And Dr. Arthur Brooks, he said there's five things you can do with money and one of them
doesn't bring happiness.
And this goes back to your point.
So the first thing you can do with money is you can buy stuff.
Second thing you can do with money is buy your time back.
That's a great one.
Third thing you can do is buy experiences.
Spend money on experiences, especially with people you love.
He said that one has one of the greatest ROIs.
The fourth thing you can do is save money, invest money.
Also great.
Very good feeling.
And the fifth thing is giving money away.
And the one thing that won't bring happiness is buying stuff.
Yeah.
And what is the one thing we focus on as a consumer culture?
Buying.
Stuff.
Because guess what?
Rich is visible.
Wealth is invisible.
And so stuff equals rich to a lot of people.
It showcases you're rich.
Yeah.
I'm not going around with a t-shirt with my 401K balance on it.
You know?
I don't have a shirt that says, I have inner people.
into 401K.
That could be some good merch.
We'll work on that.
That's good.
Buying your time back.
That's one of the things I've been doing recently
having kids now is how much stuff can I delegate
that I don't enjoy doing
or that takes me a lot of time
so that I can be more present
and focus on things that I'm good at or enjoy.
That's a game changer for me.
And then buying experiences.
I mean, this is the vacations,
the trips, the memories.
Like when your kids are older,
that's the stuff the core memories made
from like 10 to 16.
Those are formative.
for your kids. And so that's where I want to focus on instead of, yeah, but I had some pretty sweet
stuff that my kids ended up having to send to Goodwill after I died. Right. And so that to your point,
the older you get, the more matured you get, the more secure you get, the more you focus on those
other four areas. And too many people have over-indexed on stuff. Because the easiest one to
show people that you've made it and to show yourself that you've made it. If someone is a
compulsive buyer of things, what is missing inside of them that requires them to constantly
buy online, offline to feel good? Well, the root of that is discontentment. And what's
underneath that could be a myriad of things. But namely, it is there was something that happened
in my life, probably a past trauma or a childhood, a scarcity thing, where I learned that the way
I could cope was by getting a thing. And that thing could distract me for enough time that I didn't
have to deal with the real pain underneath. Man. So that's the heart of it. And most people, if you
pulled them and said, hey, what's really going on? And I sat, you know, they were with a therapist for
three weeks. We could probably get to the root of, I see what happened. That trauma, you didn't
know how to deal with it. You didn't have the tools to deal with it. So you just said, I'm going to go
into a bunch of debt to try to feel something because I'm not getting this thing over here.
And so there's a lot of just unhealthy behaviors underneath the surface that manifest themselves
as impulsive spending. And sometimes there is addictive behaviors that need to be dealt with.
And that's why I always tell people to add friction back in your life, take away all of your
ability to impulsively spend, whether it's through accountability with a spouse, removing your debit
card info, don't have the app on your phone. You know, it's like if you had a bunch of junk
food in your pantry, are you going to be more tempted to eat junk food?
100%.
And if your pantry is filled with clean foods, I mean, the green room over here, we were just
joking about how clean the food.
Everything's high protein.
All the drinks are super clean, no sugar.
And I'm going, yeah, well, Lewis is going to be healthier if he doesn't give himself
access and temptation to the things he knows are bad for him.
Yes.
And yet when it comes to money, we give ourselves unfettered access to all the things that
are destroying our life.
and then we wonder why we're not where we want to be. We're not feeling how we want to feel.
So the solution is so much more simple than we would give ourselves credit for. But it's to add friction back to our lives,
make things intentionally a little more difficult because that's where the true peace and growth lie.
And the easier you try to make life, the more comfort you chase, the more miserable you'll end up being.
And Michael Easter wrote a great book on this called The Comfort Crisis, where he talks about it kind of how we got here.
And he has a whole, you know, a website called 2% where he goes, 2% of the people will take the stairs.
98 would take the elevator.
And so it's do the hard, uncomfortable thing because that's what creates a fulfilling life,
not chasing the easiest path that was laid out before you by marketing companies.
What would you say is your biggest struggle with money today?
From being, you know, at the Ramsey's show and teaching these things and applying it,
What is your biggest challenge still that you deal with around money?
I've done the strengths finder assessment.
And my number one was futuristic.
So I'm always so focused on the future.
And I have financial plans for days until I am 98.
Here's what the net worth might be.
Here's what I could do.
Here's all the variations and projections.
And I have a really hard time stopping myself and say, stop.
You're good.
You don't need another goal.
Be content with the life you have.
Be present with the people around you and stop being so focused on,
okay, what's the next thing?
What's the next thing?
And that is the one thing I really struggle with today.
And part of it is because I'm a nerd and I just enjoy it.
It's fun.
It's like a hobby for me.
It's fun.
I don't golf.
I don't work out.
I make financial projections on my phone and whittle at them and have fun with that.
But there is a real truth to it that I need to work on my own version of what contentment
looks like when it comes to wealth.
because I know the goalpost will move.
Yeah, once you hit it, then what?
Yeah, you see this with the fire movement,
financially independent, retire early.
Yeah.
You'll see the threads and they'll go,
hey, our goal is $2 million,
but now we're thinking $5 million,
just with the way things are going
and kind of how we want to live our life.
And then when they get to $5 million, what happens?
Well, I think $10 million, you know, with inflation,
I mean, I feel like $10 million is probably a safer bet.
Then they work jobs they hate that are burning them out.
They're making great money,
a couple hundred thousand dollars,
if they're shoveling it all away.
That's kind of how the fire movement works
in your 20s, 30s and maybe even 40s.
But then they're burnt out
and they spend the rest of their life
trying to recover from the marathon
they just ran that wore them out.
And so there's a, I think, just a healthy balance
of moderation here.
Be intentional, but don't lose your soul
to some financial goal.
Wow.
What is the philosophy of the fire movement?
The philosophy is,
I don't want to have to work till I'm 65
and not have that freedom
to do what I want to do,
to set my own schedule.
And therefore, what I'll do, which this is the one good thing about it, is that delayed gratification.
I'm going to work my tail off.
I'm going to make as much money as I can, spend as little as I can, and invest the difference.
So it's just taking a good thing to an extreme.
Anytime you take something to an extreme, it usually ends up being unhealthy.
It's like financial minimism, almost.
Yes.
And so it's cool because they're not living flashy lives.
They're driving the older cars.
cars. They're not taking all the trips, but at what cost? And so I'm a big fan of live your
life how you want to live it now while preparing for the future. And then you can change some
dials on there. You don't need to work to your 65, but let's also not villainize work.
Because what happens is they find an encore career because someone who's making $200,000
had a lot to contribute to society. And you stop giving value to people just to like sit on a
beach all day? You get bored real quick. I'd be bored. Exactly. And so they find themselves with an
Encore career doing the thing they probably should have been doing all along, maybe even making more
money. Because they're good at it. And they found like, oh, I'm good at this and people find value from
this and I get paid really well. And wow, amazing. Exactly. So there's a balance to be found there.
And that's the one thing I'm struggling with is how aggressive should I be? How can I ratchet down and
enjoy life more now and spend more on, you know, my wife wants to go to Disney. My daughter's two
and a half. My son's seven months. And you're like, oh, it's just for us.
And that's okay.
It's not for the kids because they can't enjoy it.
Once I had it, once I told myself, it's okay.
Not everything has to have intense utility for it to be good.
And I'm such a utility guy.
Really?
I have a hard time letting go and going, this is a waste of money and it was worth it.
Man.
I want to waste money in the right ways.
That's what you did with that jacket, right?
Exactly.
You know, you wanted to look good?
I want to look good for Lewis.
I said, let's really spread.
Now Lewis wants it.
I love it.
It's a nice jacket.
Next time we're going to be in matching jackets.
I like it.
Yeah, I like that a lot.
If I had muscles like you, though,
everything would be short sleeve. I just want you to know that. I'm hiding a lot here. I like that,
man. That's cool. I appreciate it. What's one thing if you had to spend and indulge money that you
would never spend on something in the next 12 months that would bring you more joy and live in the
moment now? What would that be? Oh. Thing, trip, item, whatever. So the two areas that we focused on,
my wife and I because now she stays home. So we met at Ramsey. So the money, goals, and values.
Already there. It's beautiful. We saved a lot of time on our dates without having to talk about all that.
And so she ended up staying home when we had our first kid after her nine-year career at Ramsey.
And so my big focus, I said, hey, the home is now your office. So when we bought our new house,
I really wanted it to be beautiful. And the amount of upgrades you can do to a home on a new build,
it's insane. So much. And so we did a lot of splurges because I wanted, we like an aesthetic home.
And it's just for us to enjoy. We're not like, you know, no one's seeing the inside of our house.
You're there all the time, so you want to enjoy it. Exactly. And I realize a lot of times when people go spend a lot of money and want to leave their house and go to bars and eat out, it's because their own space is not a fun space to be in. It's kind of depressing. And so I wanted to make our home really beautiful. So we put a lot of money into that to make that an awesome space. And then car. I finally upgraded because Dave was making fun of my cars. I didn't do it for Dave, but I did get a.
Tesla just to piss him off again. So I got a newer Tesla. It's 13 years newer than my last one.
Wow. Which, you know, technology. I mean, Tesla started about 13 years ago. Way better now.
So that was a absolute game changer. And in my mind, the fact that old George would be like,
you did what? Are you serious? It brought you a lot of value. Yeah. And every day you get
experience that value, right? Exactly. So there are things that I still think are, like I think I'll
go to the grave thinking they're a waste of money. Things that I, like a DoorDash, for example.
Oh, yeah.
Even when I'm, if I was a billionaire, I would still be like, yeah, I'll just go pick it up.
I'm not, I'm not going to pay double for that same burrito.
I'd have to be real desperate.
You know, if you live in L.A. like here, I get it.
It would take you three hours to go out and do anything in L.A.
Yeah, there's at least five minutes down the road, you go pick it up.
But I actually enjoy doing the things wise.
I enjoy going to the grocery store versus getting Instacart.
Yeah.
I like the hunt and the search.
So the things I think I could ratchet down and enjoy more are those experiences and trips where I go, you know what?
this is really, the kids may not remember, but we'll have the photos and videos.
And so that's the part I'm giving into my wife on this one trip.
So you guys got to do Disney then?
I think we have to at this point.
Wow.
In the fall.
Whenever I did, so I used AI to tell me what is the best day to go to Disney with the least amount of crowds.
That's great.
As I get older, I think I have like sensory issues.
I don't like loud environments, you know, crowded environments.
So I need it to feel like I can breathe.
Good luck at Disney.
me. There's no off day. That's why
I'm like, what is the day with the least amount of
people? I don't care if it's miserably
cold. I'll be out there
in a jacket. There's no cold here in L.A. either.
You'll be nice. Yeah, I should come to, that's
where I need. Forget Orlando.
It's just so much closer to Tennessee
as the crow flies. That's true. You know, you take a
trip with a toddler and an infant.
You're like, maybe we should have chosen the shorter
flight. That's true. That's true.
This has been awesome,
George. You've got an amazing show
YouTube channel. Smart Money. Happy Hour.
you're all over social media,
George Campbell and social media as well.
And you're doing a lot of man on the street content now,
which is kind of cool.
So you're going out there and you're asking people,
the real people, what's going on?
And you're getting the content there.
Harassing strangers for views.
It's a lot of fun.
It's voyeuristic, I think, is what people enjoy about it.
I got to try that at some point.
It's figuring out, like, how much time it takes, you said.
It just takes so much time.
Oh, it's good.
You know, you're out there four or five hours in the elements.
You might get a video, right?
I mean, you've been solicit.
to my strangers in the street.
Not exactly.
I'm going to my next thing, yeah.
Yeah.
Now, you're more intimidating figure.
Right.
But I also think people would rather talk to you than me, so I think you've got a shot.
Never know.
What if you offered people $100 to give you a conversation?
Wow.
We should try that.
I'll see if Dave Ramsey's willing to foot the bill.
Yeah.
So we need $1,000 every shoot to talk to 10 people.
Hey, you get a lot more videos.
But you don't want, if then they're forced to talk to you, I want them to want them to want it.
That's true.
Want it.
Want to suffer with me.
Exactly. Reveal yourselves. I think the reason people love it and watching it is because they want to see how they stack up. It's a little bit unhealthy, but also very entertaining. And I can do my best teaching in a casual conversation versus a direct-to-camera. It's not as heavy-handed. That's good. Because now you're learning through their mistake and me pointing out, hey, if you invested this much, you could have this much in retirement. Wow. And I convinced an 18-year-old day trader to open a Roth IRA and invest instead. Right there? He said, I've never heard of investing. What is that? I said,
you know how to day trade, but you don't know what investing is?
And I said, if you delete the day trading app, I'll give you our budgeting app every dollar.
I will show you how to open a Roth IRA so that you're actually building for the future instead of
speculating, hoping to make a buck.
And so that was, I feel like I did a good deed that day.
What's the difference between day trading and prediction markets?
You know, they're very similar in that.
They're both speculation.
You're just sort of fingers crossed.
it's gambling, but it's better branding.
I find day traders tend to be more sophisticated
because it is more, you need to have more know-how.
Anybody can say, you know, what's going to happen on the news
and what's going to happen?
Is this trade of Hormu's going to open this week?
Yes or no?
That's an easier thing than learning how to day trade
and going through a prop firm.
And being on there all day or whatever it is, yeah.
Yeah, it takes a lot of time.
And the truth is, you know, 97% of people
do not profit if they stick with it for a year.
Really? Day trading.
So it's a real, the stats are sad.
You have a better shot making money with a multi-level marketing company than you do day trading.
What is one stat around money or the economy right now that is blown you away?
Foof.
Four in ten people have zero dollars in savings.
That one kind of shook me.
And it spoke to this idea that why are we going to crippling debt?
because we don't have any money to pay for the thing.
And so there's this endless cycle.
It's a doom loop where I don't have the money, so I go into debt.
And then another thing happens, and I have to keep going to debt because I wasn't able to save up
because I was making the payments.
And that's how you get stuck in the cycle.
And I think if more people realize that your emergency fund is a never go into debt again
insurance plan, they would make it a priority.
They would get rid of the debt, free themselves with those payments, stack the cash
in a savings account, and the high-yield savings account,
Don't touch it. It's a breaking case of emergency, not I want to go on the trip impulsively.
And if you did that, we would see such a shift in the economy when it comes to how stress people are, how anxious they are, the kind of jobs they had to work.
And that's the most heartbreaking calls when people are working because they have to and not because they want to.
And that's where these people end up if they keep living this way. And so no matter how old you are, it's never too late.
And we get calls with people in their 60s and 70s who finally decide enough is enough, I'm going to have.
I'm going to have a life of dignity, even after, you know, four decades of mistakes and bad
decisions. You can still turn it around. It's just harder, the older you get. So when 20-year-olds go,
man, I'm so dumb. I go, great, you got it over with early. Now you get the rest of your life
to make wise decisions. Yeah. Don't wait to your 60. Yes. What would be three money rules?
If you could only apply three in your 20s and 30s that every person had to do in their 20s and 30s,
what would those three money rules be? Oh, I love this. Okay.
Okay, number one, take debt off the table.
Mortgage excluded.
But if you can take that off the table and say,
I'm not going to have a credit card,
I'm not going to go on a credit card debt,
I'm going to avoid a car payment by saving up and paying cash,
upgrading over time,
your life will be so much better than all of your peers
who got there faster.
You know, it's the hair.
They have the nicer car before you did.
But man, when you got there,
it was so well earned
and you got peace the whole way there.
So taking debt off the table would be number one.
Number two would be investing in a Roth IRA.
That is after tax money that grows tax free and you don't have to pay Uncle Sam ever again.
That to me is the greatest life hack.
Meaning you could have $2 million of net income because it's in a Roth IRA.
And it doesn't take much.
A hundred bucks a month at 20 will get you there versus, you know, you have to spend hundreds more as you get older.
So maxing out a Roth IRA is a life hack.
If you can do that the sooner the better, you're going to retire dignity, taking debt off the table.
And lastly, would be the budget.
Download the every dollar app, list out your income, list out all of your expenses.
You don't have to spend six hours whittling away an Excel spreadsheet.
All it is is saying, hey, here's how much is coming in.
Here's how much is going out.
Am I happy with that?
Are there any tweaks I'd like to make so that future me is proud of myself?
Instead of going, man, I made great money.
I got a raise last year and I didn't feel it at all.
You took on a bigger payment.
You spent more on eating out.
And so, you know, you give yourself the wiggle room.
You're going to take it.
And so adding that friction back in by staying on a budget,
taking debt off the table, and investing early through a tax-advantaged retirement account,
like a Roth IRA.
I don't see how you couldn't have a life of financial freedom and peace.
What's the budget app again, you guys?
It's called Everydollar.
Everydollar.com or what is this?
Yeah, everydollar.com.
Or you can go to your app store, Google Play, and get it.
Our team upgraded it recently to where it has the Ramsey principles baked in.
So we'll actually show you custom recommendations to find more margin based on everything
you've told us.
That's cool.
So it's really cool because it's no longer just putting your numbers in.
We're carving out a path for you to get out of that faster, get the emergency fund faster,
and have more margin to build wealth.
And so it's really, it's been souped up in the last six to 12 months.
That's cool.
We're really excited about it.
Every dollar.com or every dollar on the app.
store. What I'm hearing you say, the theme throughout this is if you can create financial
friction in your life right now, you can eventually become financially free. Tweet that. That's
exactly. I should have said that earlier. You got away with words. Well, I'm just hearing what
you're saying, and I'm repeating it back, that the more we create financial friction,
meaning take the, take date off the table, take credit cards out, like make it harder for you
to say, oh, I have to take my cash out and buy this now. Do I really want this or not? When you do that
and you create a budget and a plan to start investing the moment you hear this, like how can I
start somewhere investing for my future? You will create more financial peace and freedom later.
Exactly. That's the whole goal of the YouTube channel is to convince an entire generation from,
you know, 20 to 45 plus. I mean, I have people who are in their 60s watch it, people who are seven
years old, watch it, and go, thank you for, number one, making financial principles understandable
and entertaining. Because I think if we can use humor, it kind of takes down the wall of like money
scary and money is shameful and money's guilt. Instead of it goes, let's laugh while we learn about
what the heck a Roth IRA is and, you know, what's worth spending money on. Because money is,
it's a tool. And for most people, it's an obstacle. And so that gap between turning money from an
obstacle to a tool takes a lot of hard work. And that's what you.
those Ramsey principles allow you to do that with a purpose.
Live and give like no one else.
Generosity's on the other side.
That's the most fun you can have with money.
And I think most people don't realize that until they're way later in life.
How many Ramsey principles are there?
There's seven baby steps that sort of lay out the financial plan.
It's pretty simple.
Baby step one, $1,000 starter emergency fund.
Baby step two, get rid of all your consumer debt using that debt snowball method.
Baby step three, save up three to six months of expenses.
and an emergency fund.
Babyself, four, invest 15% of your income into tax advantage retirement accounts.
Baby step five, if you have kids, put some money aside for college in like a 529 plan,
an education savings account, let it grow with compound interest and growth.
And then six is pay off the house early.
And you have the margin to do that because you have no payments.
And so you can pay off the mortgage early.
And then baby step seven is this endless mountain top experience where you get to live and give like
no one else, build wealth, max out retirement.
go on the craziest trips.
I mean, the things that we hear people doing,
we had a call,
can I go on a $25,000
European vacation and take my whole family?
And we were like,
yeah, you're worth $5 million.
Let's go ahead and do it.
Yeah.
If you've done all these other steps,
do whatever you want.
You've earned it.
And then we get the call
with someone who wants to go on a $2,000 trip.
We have to tell them no
because they're $100,000 in debt.
Uh-huh.
And so it really is dependent
on your financial situation.
If you were able to add one
extra value to the Ramsey values yourself from everything you've learned in life, what would be
the George Camel money value that you would add? That's a good one. I'll give you a tactical one,
and that is to invest outside of retirement once you've got your retirement locked in. So once you're
investing 15% into retirement, I love the idea of creating this freedom fund, this bridge account,
where let's say you do want to be work optional in your 50s. You don't have to work until 60s. You don't
have to work until 60 to access those retirement accounts. And you have the freedom to go,
you know what, I'm 50. The kids are about to head to college. Let's take some crazy trips.
Let me take a year off. And so when your boss, you know, starts mouthing off to you again,
you go, you know what, I'm out of here. I don't need the money. I'm good. And so that, to me,
is the path to financial freedom that a lot of people don't think about, that they can invest
outside of retirement. But I have a smart spender framework that I would add, it's a layer on
top of the Ramsey principles. And it basically is your
permission to spend. And so S is for self-awareness. Will this really add value to my life? The M is for
motive. Am I buying this for the right reason? A is for affordability. Can I afford this in cash,
in full? The R is for research. Have I actually researched all of the options out there? Is this the best
option retailer and price I can find versus impulsively clicking the first thing? And then T is for timing.
Is now the right time to buy this thing? It may not be a bad thing, but it might be the right,
the wrong time to buy that thing. This is opportunity cost.
You know, if I spend five grand on the vacation, I can't put five grand toward the car fund that we desperately need.
And so if you can go through those and say yes to all of them, you can spend with such intentionality and confidence.
And too many people just don't have a framework to spend.
They just do it impulsively or with guilt and then go, I shouldn't have done that.
Where can they get that framework at?
That's in my book, Breaking Free from Broke.
I've got a whole chapter called Spending a Self-control where I walk through, how to sort of free or
when it comes to spending.
And I wrote that chapter for me as someone who needs to let go.
So I need to create a framework for myself.
That's great, man.
To feel good about it.
That's great.
This has been awesome, George.
I got one final question.
I asked you this before in the last episode if people haven't seen it on the Delta flight yet.
That's right.
That's so cool, by the way.
The partnership with YouTube.
Yeah, yeah, it's good.
But I'm curious if your definition has changed.
So we'll have to go back and see what it was before.
Oh.
But what is your definition of greatness?
Hmm.
Do you have one that you're, is there, is there a standard definition that you use?
Everyone has something different.
Okay.
Everyone has something different.
I can share my, I've shared mine on here a bunch, but it's, um, I won't muddy the
water.
No, don't spoil it.
Okay.
But it's, uh, it can be whatever's on your heart and mind right now.
Greatness to me, it's got to be something that isn't inspirational and aspirational.
Doesn't have to be, whatever you're, this is me telling you.
Yeah, it's okay.
It's something that you never arrive at.
I think it's almost like a virtue of bettering yourself, not for yourself, but for everything and
everyone around you. To me, that's true greatness. If you're great just for yourself, that's ego and
narcissism. But if you are pursuing greatness, pursuing personal growth, professional growth,
so that you can create a legacy, make an impact, bless those around you, there is no better
definition of greatness to me. My man, George. Thanks. Thank you, Louis.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's episode
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And I want to remind you if no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy,
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And now it's time to go out there and do something great.
