cover of episode 66. “I’m marrying him in 1 month—but our finances are terrifying me”

66. “I’m marrying him in 1 month—but our finances are terrifying me”

2022/10/25
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I Will Teach You To Be Rich

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B
Beth
一位获得艾美奖和格蕾西奖的商业分析师和《Jill on Money》播客主持人,专注于个人财务和投资建议。
J
John
一位专注于跨境资本市场、并购和公司治理的资深律师。
R
Ramit Sethi
Topics
Beth: Beth在结婚前一个月才和John认真讨论财务问题,她对婚礼预算感到焦虑,即使父母已经赠送了2万美元,她仍然担心成为John的经济负担,并害怕John日后会因此对她产生怨恨。她承认自己过去常常回避财务问题,难以理解复杂的财务知识,并感到不知所措。她希望通过学习更多财务知识来消除恐惧,并希望John能够主动和她沟通财务方面的担忧。她计划在蜜月回来后辞职,但担心这会影响他们的财务平衡,并担心自己对家庭的贡献不足。 John: John在婚礼预算方面缺乏清晰的指导,他将决定权交给了Beth,导致Beth感到压力。他承认自己没有向Beth明确说明自己的净资产,直到结婚前几天Beth才知道他拥有巨额存款。他希望婚礼筹备过程能够更轻松一些,并表示可以接受Beth不工作,但希望她能够在一年内找到新工作。他承认自己在财务方面缺乏主动性,导致沟通不足。 Ramit Sethi: Ramit Sethi 指出Beth和John在婚礼预算和退休金规划上的处理方式存在相似之处:回避。他鼓励Beth和John建立财务信心、能力和沟通能力,并建议他们考虑婚后协议。他强调了详细了解财务状况的重要性,以及建立关键原则来应对大量的财务决策。他指出Beth和John需要找到一种健康的方式来讨论财务问题,并鼓励他们接受并利用他们的财务优势。他认为Beth和John目前的财务状况是一个学习机会,并指出他们需要更清晰的沟通和共同的财务目标。 Beth: Beth在结婚前一个月才和John认真讨论财务问题,她对婚礼预算感到焦虑,即使父母已经赠送了2万美元,她仍然担心成为John的经济负担,并害怕John日后会因此对她产生怨恨。她承认自己过去常常回避财务问题,难以理解复杂的财务知识,并感到不知所措。她希望通过学习更多财务知识来消除恐惧,并希望John能够主动和她沟通财务方面的担忧。她计划在蜜月回来后辞职,但担心这会影响他们的财务平衡,并担心自己对家庭的贡献不足。她的回避行为体现在多个方面,包括对婚礼预算的漠视,对财务信息的缺乏理解,以及对寻求更多帮助的迟疑。 John: John在婚礼预算方面缺乏清晰的指导,他将决定权交给了Beth,导致Beth感到压力。他承认自己没有向Beth明确说明自己的净资产,直到结婚前几天Beth才知道他拥有巨额存款。他希望婚礼筹备过程能够更轻松一些,并表示可以接受Beth不工作,但希望她能够在一年内找到新工作。他承认自己在财务方面缺乏主动性,导致沟通不足。他表示愿意与Beth共同解决财务问题,并努力改进沟通方式。 Ramit Sethi: Ramit Sethi 指出Beth和John在婚礼预算和退休金规划上的处理方式存在相似之处:回避。他鼓励Beth和John建立财务信心、能力和沟通能力,并建议他们考虑婚后协议。他强调了详细了解财务状况的重要性,以及建立关键原则来应对大量的财务决策。他指出Beth和John需要找到一种健康的方式来讨论财务问题,并鼓励他们接受并利用他们的财务优势。他认为Beth和John目前的财务状况是一个学习机会,并指出他们需要更清晰的沟通和共同的财务目标。他帮助他们理清了问题的核心,并鼓励他们积极面对挑战。

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Beth and John, who are about to get married, have never discussed their finances in detail. Beth is concerned about becoming a financial burden and wants a prenup, but it's too late for that. They need to find common ground before their marriage.

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Before we start today's show, I have a really exciting announcement that I've been wanting to share for a long time. On January 1st, 2025, I'm releasing a new book called Money for Couples. For the last three years, you've heard me on this podcast speaking to different couples every single Tuesday. I've spoken to over 170 couples on this show about their money psychology, the money messages they heard from their family, the peculiar dynamics that they have around money and where they get stuck.

and how they can get on the same page. Well, behind the scenes, I've been working on the definitive book to help couples get on the same page with money, and that's what I wrote for you. It's coming out January 1st, and in the book, I'm going to share how to talk about money, including the exact words to use, when to talk about it, how to teach your kids about money, even the exact agenda and account setup that my wife and I use in our finances.

I'm going to show the tactics to make instant improvements, like how to set up your accounts to automatically work together and how to assess your financial health.

And finally, you're going to get a deeper understanding of money psychology in your relationship. And you're going to discover why you and your partner see money differently and how to get on the same page. Now, it's one thing to listen to couples or watch couples every single week. I love doing that for you. But it's a whole different thing to be able to have the book and to be able to work through it with your partner. Okay?

I'm so excited to get this book in your hands. You can pre-order it using the link IWT.com slash money for couples and stay tuned for a lot more on this book this year. Again, go to IWT.com slash money for couples to pre-order my new book about getting on the same financial page as your partner.

Um, what the hell is going on on this podcast that like 80% of the people who come on here go through massive screening, fill out applications, they never actually read my book. Is anyone else puzzled by this? Look, a lot of the questions that you ask me about money are answered directly in I Will Teach You To Be Rich. How do you pay off your student loans? How do you automate your finances? Where do you start investing and how do you handle big purchases?

I wrote this book as a six-week program so you can follow along on your own or with a partner. If you want to improve your finances, I recommend you get the I Will Teach You To Be Rich book. It has over 18,000 reviews on Amazon. Get it at iwt.com slash book. I've worked really hard to try to keep up, but I still am really afraid that it still won't be good enough.

I'm worried that John would come to resent me someday. Like, I feel bad when John has to pay for stuff because I can't. I didn't want to be a burden. Is this tough to talk about? Yeah, avoidance is a huge tactic for me and has been a previous financial tactic for me for a while.

John did try. Like, we would talk about finances. I just didn't have the ability to comprehend. A lot of times it also felt really overwhelming to be coming from a place of former scarcity to now feeling like I have to learn a bunch of new rules. You do. You do.

Beth does have to learn new rules. She's been in scarcity mode for years, and she and John came to me one month before their wedding day because they are not on the same page with their finances. They're worth almost $800,000 combined, and Beth is struggling to adapt to this new reality. They're stuck on their wedding budget, they're stuck on getting a prenup, and they're stuck on whether or not Beth should leave her toxic job.

But as we discuss, these issues go much deeper. I'm Ramit Sethi, and this is I Will Teach You To Be Rich. Beth, can you think of a time in the last month where the two of you were not on the same financial page? Yeah. In the last 30 days, we've probably had some disconnect about wedding spending. How do you decide how much you're going to spend on your wedding? That depends on who you ask. Let's start with you. I feel like...

I feel like $20,000 is a reasonable amount to spend on the kind of wedding we're expecting to have. Okay. And where did you come up with that number? I looked at national averages for where we live. Did you make a spreadsheet of this or what?

No, I don't make the spreadsheets in our household. Oh, who does? John is our spreadsheet maker. Okay, interesting. And so when you looked at the average prices, just out of curiosity, do you make the average income in your area? Yes, I probably make a little bit above average, but I am not the big breadwinner. I don't make a ton of money. And what about John?

John makes more than me. I think John makes more than average for our area. Okay. Who's paying for the wedding? It's a combination of us and then my parents donated some, like they offered to give us money, which was really surprising because they offered us a very generous amount to put towards the wedding. How much? $20,000. Oh, really? Yeah. They said we could have that money and we could do whatever we wanted with it.

Observation number one, Beth comes into this call stressed out about how they will pay for their wedding, which she's budgeted at $20,000. That is a seemingly random number that we're going to get to in just a second, even though her parents gifted her that same amount to use on the wedding.

This is a perfect example of how your feelings about money are highly uncorrelated to the amount of money you've got in the bank. She budgeted 20K, she got 20K, but she still feels stressed out. So John, when you started thinking about the wedding and the numbers behind it, what was your approach?

kind of deferred to Beth to, you know, set the budget. Wait a minute. You deferred the budget to her. She came back and told you 20 K and then what happened? You said, okay. Yeah. Yeah. We did have a conversation about that. Um, how'd that conversation go? He said, if you have a magic number, like if 37 was the magic number, I'd feel comfortable spending it. I don't know. Where did you come up with that number? I just picked numbers out of the air. Is that a recurring theme, John?

Somewhat. She was still pretty hesitant to go above that just because she's stressed about the budget. And I really had this 20K number in my head and that's what we should stay under. I only make like 50K. So it was very much like

20,000 is a lot, but 30, oh my God, now we're talking over half of my yearly income for a one-day party. Beth, I'm trying to understand if the 20K is actually based in any numbers or any reason, or is it just that you feel you should spend a maximum of 20K? I guess it's really based in the... It's not like, oh, this must be... It's more of a feeling like we're over the 20K mark.

I guess for me, it was such an escalation. It was like $20,000. And then it was like, okay, now it's $30,000. Where I guess I'm not looking back and being like, oh yeah, we did sit down and look at how quickly expenses were adding up. And that's when John was like, okay, the magic number is $37,000. Let's make it $37,000. And I was like, that's so much money. We can't do that. Where we can. It's not like we don't have the money. What is the amount that the wedding is currently budgeted at?

A lot of quiet on this call all of a sudden. Wow, it got very quiet in here. We don't know. Whoa! You just said, all right, it's not 20, it's not 37. The hell with it. Whatever it ends up being, that's what it's going to be. Wow, a lot of nods around the room. Yeah. What? How did that happen, Beth? I just didn't have the bandwidth to worry about it anymore. Does it feel better or worse? It feels better. Yeah.

I'm nervous about after and looking back, but I got to the point where people were asking, how's wedding planning going? And I'm like, this is the worst thing I've ever done. This is not a healthy relationship with money. First, they picked an arbitrary number for the wedding and they felt stressed. Then, even though they were gifted $20,000, they still felt guilty about money.

And finally, when the stress got too much, they stopped paying attention to how much their wedding costs altogether. They actually have no idea how much they're spending and they feel good about ignoring it. This is a big red flag. A wedding is just the first of hundreds of large financial decisions you'll make in your lifetime. Ignoring it sets a dangerous precedent for how they'll handle future financial decisions together.

It's been really stressful. Why? I was so unhappy that it was just like, I'm not enjoying this time. So by just accepting that we're going to be okay, we've got the money. Well, I think we've got the money to do it. And we're,

It's either try to enjoy this time while I have it or be miserable and reflect back on this not being the joyous time it should be. John, how do you feel about this wedding process in terms of the finances? I wish the beginning was a little more, a little easier, especially because Beth had a lot of stress and it's me trying to pull her kind of along more.

into my mindset of, hey, we're going to need these things. We need a venue. We need a caterer. We need a DJ. And as long as we don't go too crazy over the top, it doesn't really matter what the actual spend is. We've got the money. Let's just spend it and not worry about it anymore.

I don't think you get that to you, spending more can reduce stress. But to Beth, having an undefined amount of money to spend is actually what causes the stress. To Beth, just having this 20K alone is a lot of money, as she put. And then to be even contemplating going over

That is the bad zone for her. And so when you say, oh, well, we could spend more and it won't make you stressed, you don't realize that spending $20,001 is actually stressful to her. And then in the end, both of you going, ah, I don't even want to pay attention to this. Let's just finish this wedding and we'll deal with this other stuff later. When is the wedding? October 15th. Less than a month away. Yeah, we're 30 days out.

I remember getting engaged to my wife and I asked a lot of my married friends for advice. And some of the comments came back and there was the eye roll and going, oh boy, it's going to be a year. Oh boy, you're in for it. And then I remember one of my friends said, this is going to be the best year of your life. You can choose to have fun or you can choose to roll your eyes. And they said, just choose to have a great time. You get to do this together.

And I loved it. I chose to make it the best year of my life. My wife and I had a blast planning the wedding. Yeah, sure, it was stressful some of the time. But we chose to make it a positive experience. The way I hear Beth and John talking is reactive. And it's a bad precedent.

It's like spilling a bunch of orange juice and letting it sit on the floor overnight. You do it once, you wake up and you go, hey, that wasn't so bad. Now you have sticky floors for the rest of your life. Notice the phrases she uses, nervous, scared, the worst thing she's ever done. These are not the words of what should be one of the best experiences of their life. We also heard that Beth only thinks they have the money for this. Now, unbudgeted wedding.

But John sounds very confident, even casual about it. Let's explore that contrast. There was a lot of uncertainty about money, as John was saying at the start of planning. John's like, well, I've got money. And I'm like, I...

I don't know where it is. I don't know what it looks like. I really think that I felt like we would... I thought we were average people, so it would make sense to spend the average amount of money. Can I just ask you a question? Beth, what is your net worth? I mean, the two of you. $800,000. $800,000? I don't normally look at a number this big, so I'm double-checking where my decimal points are, honestly. You want to look at it? I want you to feel confident about it. It's your money.

Well, it's our combined net worth, but most of it is John's. And so it doesn't feel right to say that it's my money. We don't have the... I don't know what it is in English terms. We don't have ustedes. It's you're the two of yours together once you're married. That's what I'm asking. What is your combined net worth?

Yeah, almost $800,000. How's that feel to say out loud? Surreal. Yeah, pretty surreal because that's not a number I thought I would get to. And Beth, you mentioned that you make 50K. John, what's your income? I'm around 80 and that fluctuates. I do have some stocks.

That is part of my total compensation. Got it. You have a considerable amount of money saved up, like out of roughly 800K, about 700K of it is yours, over 700K. Is that fair to say? Yeah. You have $800,000 in the net worth. And how old are you both?

Turning 40 in a couple of weeks. Beth? I am 35. Okay. So you're 35 and 40. You live in the Midwest and you have $800,000 net worth. Does that sound average to you? No, but that net worth is newer to me than it has ever been for John. I totally agree. John, you've been slowly accumulating this money over a long period of time. You've gotten used to it.

You've lived with it, thought about it, felt it. Okay. Beth, when was the first time you discovered John had over $700,000? Monday. Whoa. What'd you think he had before?

I knew that, you know, he had stock. Like, you know, I know that he works for a big tech company. I know that he gets our OUSs. Like, so I know, I was aware of... Did you know the number? No. John, man, you're like less than a month away from getting married and your fiance is just now learning you have $700,000 plus in the bank?

I don't know if that's 100% accurate. I know that Beth and I have talked a lot about finances, especially when we were combining things. One of the things that I didn't do well was expressly come to her with exact figures.

Lots of passive behavior here from John. He gives Beth loose guidelines for the wedding budget, which stresses her out. He doesn't expressly come to her with exact figures about his net worth. So she only learns he has $700,000 a few days before they're getting married. The details matter. And they also help us understand why Beth feels in the dark about money.

I'm not saying this is John's fault, but I do want to highlight the dynamics of this relationship. You know how many people's conscious spending plans I see every week? What's fascinating is the categories of spending, especially the ones where people spend way more than they think they do. For example, subscriptions. Let's take a look at some recent numbers on how much people spend on subscriptions. $100 a month on subscriptions. $205 a month. That's from someone spending 76% of their take home each month on fixed costs.

$211 a month, $147 a month, and $487 a month. This is literally thousands of dollars a year, and most of us have forgotten about all the subscriptions we are actually paying for.

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My team and I create tons of material every single day. Scripts, voiceovers, emails, all kinds of material that we need to be good and we need it to happen fast. And one of the things we use is Grammarly, especially their new AI tool. For example, every Saturday, we send out my podcast newsletter. I break down an anonymous person's conscious spending plan. And I like going really deep to break down the numbers and show you things you might have missed in your own finances.

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I told her about the different buckets about where my money was. Like I have this much in savings. I've got this much in my retirement fund. I've got this much in company stock. I've got another brokerage account with other index fund investments. And John, how do you think she received that when you told her?

I don't think that it really connected to her. And it's something that I've tried to bring up and clarify for her a couple of times. But because I'm not keeping a very fine eye on it, I've got, oh, there's 50k here and 20k here. And I think, you know, there might be 100k over here. Okay. So listen, first of all, John, I actually...

empathize with you a lot because I don't want to keep a fine level of detail eye on my own personal finances either, believe it or not. I like the broad strokes. I have a few key rules that are really important to me like savings rate, asset allocation, etc. When I met my wife, she was like, what are you talking about? We need to know. And I realized she's right. First of all, it's good for me.

but it's necessary for us. We need to get a better handle on this. You've actually done quite well. And at 40, you've got over $700,000 with an $80,000 salary. That's fantastic. But it seems like the root of some of these issues is Beth just has no idea about the numbers. And just going and kind of

giving her like 10,000 different numbers. Man, if I made 50K and I had not accumulated this kind of money, it would be very overwhelming to hear someone say, 50K here, 100K there. There's probably $20,000 in the couch. I'd be like, what are you talking about? Beth? You know, John did try. Like we would, every time I make a trip across state, we would talk about finances. Like when we were both in a position of being in the car and being together, like,

He really did try. I just didn't have the ability to comprehend. And I guess I could have and probably should have looked into some of the stuff that he was telling me about. But a lot of times it also felt really overwhelming to be coming from a place of former scarcity to now feeling like I have to learn a bunch of new rules. You do.

This is quite revealing. I'm glad Beth is sharing that John has tried to share details of their finances. And she's reflecting on how she didn't take responsibility. But she says she has this, quote, feeling that she has to learn a bunch of new rules.

She does. She's about to get married and step into a considerably different socioeconomic status. That means she'll have to learn a different language and a different way of thinking. It's like walking into a fine dining restaurant for the first time. Of course, the wait staff should answer any questions you have, and ideally, they should make you feel comfortable. But it's your responsibility to take an active role in the experience. I think that...

Going into it and looking back on how the wedding planning has gone, I think I kind of let Beth down in that I didn't keep track of the details or give her enough financial direction for where the, I guess, arbitrary bar should be. That's a pretty accurate representation of how sometimes we talk about stuff. Like...

Like, well, it doesn't matter what we spend. And I'll be like, well, it kind of does to me. Like, I can't make an informed decision without a person giving me a second side of it. Like, if there's no negotiation or discussion, it's really hard to figure out where we're going to land as a team.

let's say, renovating a house. I don't know anything about it. And if I bring over some general contractor and I go, all right, how long is it going to take to do the bathroom and the kitchen? And they go, ah, no big deal. We could do it pretty fast. What does that mean? Is that a year? Is that a day? What are we talking about here? I have no sense of scale.

And so I need them to be a little bit clearer with me and to present some trade-offs. Okay, look, if you want the kitchen to look like this, this will take a month. If you want it to look like that, that'll take three months. If you want some Italian marble and we get delayed, it might take us nine months. Oh, now I understand the different options here. And now I can choose accordingly. Beth, how would that have felt to have had that experience during the wedding budgeting?

It would have been very, it would have been different because there was a lot of like, I'm doing this alone. And I, and John was like, I trust you. Well, but do I trust myself? Yes. John needs to adjust his strategy for when and how he's having these conversations. But Beth needs to take responsibility for learning about money.

We start to talk about how they plan their wedding. And then I discover another twist. They actually did come up with a very detailed plan for the wedding. They just didn't follow it. I think Beth forgot about that scary pink book that she got with the wedding planning manual with the checklists and everything. But one of the first things that we sat down to do was come up with our plan.

It was the wedding thesis or... Wedding mission statement. Love it. The wedding mission statement. Together, I think it went something like we wanted our family and friends to all be there. We wanted it to be a really great time with cocktails, food, and dancing. And it was important to me that it be...

No stress. Okay. Well, first of all, amazing that you two did that exercise. And what a beautiful mission statement. I'm just wondering, after going through that, when you face the decision, like spending an extra X thousand dollars on glasses, how did that mission statement help you make that decision? Or did it not?

I think it should have helped us make that decision, but it kind of got lost in the shuffle on all of the other decisions that we were making. Guys, you did the hard work. You came up with this beautiful mission statement and then you totally abandoned it. Like if it were me and I had your mission statement and we had come up with a general budget, Beth said 20K, and how much did these glasses cost?

Having a few key principles helps you navigate through the thousands of financial decisions you'll have to make. This is why I created my money rules. You can just Google for Ramit's money rules to see what mine are. In Beth and John's case, they actually came up with a great set of values. But when it came down to the actual financial decisions, they abandoned the values and went down into the weeds.

If you find yourself debating the price of glasses or detergent at Target, it's helpful to zoom back up to your conscious spending plan and your money rules. Let's jump into their conscious spending plan. You can download your own copy at iwt.com slash episode 66. So you currently have a net worth of $795,000. I'm describing all these terms jointly. Okay. Uh...

Looks like your gross income is about $6,000 for John and roughly $4,000 a month for Beth. A combined gross income of about $10,000 a month or roughly 120K a year. All that accurate?

Cool. Your investments, it says 8%. I don't really believe that. I think you're both investing a lot more than 8%. You've got all these RSUs and stuff like that. Is that correct? Yeah, I think the investment section of the spending plan, we just took the amount that was coming out of our net pay. And I didn't really factor in what we're putting in for our 401ks or any...

gross retirement investment. How much is going in their ballpark per month? It's a lot, right? Yeah. For my retirement, 10% of my gross is going into a 401k. I'm also maxing out an HSA and contributing the max to a Roth that comes out of net. So how much total? It's like many thousands of dollars, right? Yeah. Okay. And what about for you, Beth? Uh,

$300 a month goes into my Roth. That's what I'm doing. My work does do 12%. 12% what? Of my money a year. They match it? No, they just give me 12%. They give you 12% in retirement? Yes. Okay. Wow. That's great. So that's like...

$5,000 plus per year. It's roughly $400 a month. Okay. So you're doing $400 a month from that plus $300 of your own. Yes. I guess I didn't think about the money that comes from work. Got to count it. It's money. Got to count it. It seemed like you're a bit sheepish about only doing $300 a month, which I don't mind, but it's actually $700 a month. That's pretty good.

What do you think about that? I guess I don't really think about it because I have not been thinking about the work contribution at all lately because I'm considering not working there anymore. So I guess I really don't think about it. That's pretty much where my net worth is, is the money I didn't think about getting from my 403B for work. Beth, can I just say something? It's time to think about it.

One of the worst feelings in life is feeling stuck.

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Elevate your style using Next Level Wardrobe at nextlevelwardrobe.com slash Ramit. That's nextlevelwardrobe.com slash Ramit. Do you notice any patterns between the wedding planning budget and the way you are treating your retirement right now?

Oh, yeah. Avoidance is a huge tactic for me and has been a previous financial tactic for me for a while. It's been only the last four years that I've really changed that. Who's the one who wanted to be on this podcast? I wanted to be on the podcast. Well, that's pretty cool. That's the opposite of avoidance to come on here and talk about this stuff. How'd you get the courage to do that?

As we were talking about combining finances, John is the person who recommended that I read your book X number of years ago. You know, it became, it became apparent that there were things that we needed to do to be successful together. So, and as listening to you talk to other couples, it made sense that I should be applying. So, but avoidance, I'm trying not to be that way anymore.

In order for us to make sure that you don't feel that way, we have to build your confidence, your competence, and your communication. So let's do that. First thing I want to say from the confidence perspective is you're investing $8,000 a year right now. That is quite good. That's more than a lot of people making way more money than you are investing. I think that's impressive.

So what do I always say on the podcast? Take the win. Take the win. In fact, everybody, round of applause for Beth. Amazing. Beth, you too. I want to see those hands. I don't care if it's a little cheesy and theatrical. I think you're doing a great job investing right now. And I think you should know that in terms of competence.

We need to start looking at this stuff. The old Beth was, I don't look at this stuff. And whenever you put on those eyeglasses, you're putting on the lenses of how little can I spend? And I want to play defense instead of offense. Does this sound familiar, Beth? Yeah, she's nodding. We can actually shift. We can build your competence so that you know your numbers and that

you can start really owning what it's like to use money in a productive way. And I want, Beth, I want you to be open to learning about these right now because this is your new chapter in life. You're getting married to somebody who's going to bring you to a different level of personal finance. And obviously it's a privilege and it's a responsibility. And what I really, my dream for the two of you is that you can both accept the

the gift that you've been given and you can thrive in it. It doesn't mean you have to spend a million dollars on shirts or whatever, but it does mean you need to be realistic that financially you're doing well. I guess I just have to get more confident with the numbers. Yeah. You're getting married and you're about to walk into a relationship where the two of you jointly will have almost a million dollars. Yes. You need to get comfortable with these numbers.

I know everybody brings different things to the table. I guess when it comes to money, it doesn't feel equitable. And I'm worried about... Not that I think John would do this, but I'm worried about there being resentment. Who would resent who? I'm worried that John would come to resent me someday. For what? For not making as much or... I don't know, being a deadbeat. I don't know. I know he doesn't think of me that way, but like...

Well, why don't we just ask him? Because sometimes we create fears that don't even exist. But hey, maybe he thinks you are a deadbeat. Why don't we find out right now before you're married? John, is your fiance and soon-to-be wife in less than 30 days a deadbeat?

No, no, she is not. I was like, this guy better answer pretty quick. No, right off the bat, he had the answer. Okay, fantastic. So Beth, hey, maybe it's possible at some point in the future that feelings change. I want to be realistic. But as of today, would you agree that John does not think you're a deadbeat and does not have any plans to think you're a deadbeat in the future? Yeah, that's fair.

My philosophy is that life is hard enough. Why create more problems than we already have? Sometimes the things we fear are just in our heads. So if we have the chance to find out if they're actually true, why not ask? Beth worries John might think she's a deadbeat. So ask him. Now at least you have some information. Will that change how she feels overnight? Of course not. But at least she can start to calibrate if her feelings are leading her astray or not.

This is covered in CBT or cognitive behavioral therapy a lot more. So if you struggle with catastrophizing and fears, I would recommend talking to a CBT therapist. So you have basically $800,000 in net worth. Now, right now, it's his and her money. When you get married, what is the plan? So we have some shared and some split. And that's normally where the shared...

Checking account is what normally covers our fixed costs. Sometimes John covers extra fixed costs just because of where our credit card is. John, do you contribute proportionally? My contribution is a little higher. I contribute about 26, 28% of my net to the joint account. And Beth puts around 20 to 23% of her net into the joint. How did you all decide on that number?

That was, it just felt right at the time. John's vagueness is almost overwhelming and it doesn't help. Beth felt a lot of stress around, oh no, I'm a deadbeat. I'm not contributing enough or as much as you are. I don't make enough. Okay, hold on, hold on, hold on. What's up with his deadbeat comment, Beth? You got a deadbeat in your family or something? Yeah.

No, no, I don't know. But I probably have been the deadbeat in relationship. I've been in multiple relationships with people where one of us is the breadwinner, one of us isn't. And in almost all of those relationships, like there have been times when I'm barely making ends meet with somebody who's much more

more financially well off. And as the relationship went on, they became really resentful of having to cover more costs. So is this where the fear comes from of your soon-to-be husband eventually thinking of you as a deadbeat? Okay. So can I ask you a couple of questions about that? I respect that that's how you feel. I'm curious about how have you responded to that? What kind of things have you done

to prevent that from happening? When things that I have done to prevent that feeling of being a deadbeat, when we first started to see each other, John invited me on a big family vacation and I didn't think I could afford it. And he offered to pay for me to go. And I would not let him. Like I saved to make sure that I could cover my half because I didn't want to feel like

dead weight i didn't want to be a burden so i've worked really hard to try to carry or try to keep up with joint expenses joint needs even though i know like i feel bad when john has to pay for stuff because i can't is this tough to talk about yeah it's um

It's tough because I do feel like I've made a lot of progress financially, especially since knowing John. Like I, in the time that we've known each other, I've gone from having debt to being debt free and really just shifting my whole financial lens. It's been a lot of work. But I still am really afraid that, you know, that one day he'll look at me and he'll be like, oh my God, what am I doing?

what would it take for you to not feel afraid? I don't know yet, but maybe just feeling more aware. Us not, me not knowing where the money has been was a big thing, which is why sitting down and doing the Conscious Spending Plan, I felt so much better afterwards because I was like, this is what it all looks like. So maybe just having more knowledge. I think that's part of it.

That is that basic competence. But I think it's more than that. Because in the past, John tried to explain some of the numbers, right? And you resisted it. So even though there was an attempt to share the information, and even now you have the information in front of you, is it changing your feelings? Not really. I mean, no. Yeah. It's kind of hard to admit that because we're taught

in America that if you give people the right information, then they can make an informed decision. We treat it like it's religion, that as if giving someone information is going to change their mind. Information hardly ever changes people's minds. Information alone is not persuasive. We have a deep belief that we are rational, almost robotic in the way we think. Give people the right information and they will make an informed decision.

Really? So why do most people in America eat unhealthily and save less than 5% of their income? The information is out there. It turns out that information alone is not very persuasive at all. That's why my material always includes the element of psychology, which is vastly underappreciated in behavioral change. Speaking of psychology, Beth and John have been wanting to ask me about a prenup.

we have started our process of doing a prenup and we are, we are, you've seen the sheet. We are not like financially the same beginning. And I guess, do you have any advice for people who are

trying to do the thing. Every time we talk to anybody we know, any of our peers, any of our friends, no one has done a prenup. Why don't we start, take it step by step. We did talk about in terms of if we separate after one year, five years, 20 years, etc. And those were, we discussed it and it was also discussed between lawyers and

And, you know, it was easy at first and then it got pretty hard. Fortunately, it's unlikely that two of you will die like in the next year. It certainly should be something that you go and do. You could do it at the same time or not. But yeah, we definitely have those conversations. You guys are getting married in a month. So you're probably not going to get a prenup done in that amount of time. You know, a lot of people do a postnup.

So a post-nup is definitely a very strong option for you to do. Getting a pre-nup done in one month without even having lawyers, I don't know, it's possible, but it'd be very difficult. So how would both of you feel about a post-nup?

I mean, I assume it would not be a big... I mean, we're both 100% on board with doing a prenup. John has a lawyer and he's gone through the first round of writing stuff out. And I think he's received the first draft of his stuff so far. Beth and I just haven't had time to connect because she doesn't have bandwidth to go through it with me. So I totally get that. Can I just say, as the person who walks into our relationship with more money,

We had discussions about having a prenup and my wife was open to it. But I think, John, one thing I would say is, is a prenup important to you? Are you the one who brought it up? No. I think Beth initially brought it up as a good idea because there was such an inequity in our assets. It just seems like it's becoming more and more clear how much

this job is costing you, Beth. To not be able to have this discussion is a serious issue. And to talk about having a prenup and not have the time to do it before a wedding, we're talking about $700,000. It's pretty serious. So it seems to me that regardless of what choices have been made in the past, that you two have got to find a healthy way to talk about this stuff

Notice how Beth's tendency to avoid difficult conversations appears in so many different places. She's the one who asked for a prenup, but she won't take the time to review the material, even though they're only a month away from being married. She says it's because of the stress of possibly leaving her job.

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John, I need to leave my job. I'm worried about us feeling not equitable, especially because we're about to get married and then I'm going to leave my job. So I'm really worried about that. And I know that when I come from work, I don't have the bandwidth to sit and help. I think I could do a lot more

and, you know, address some of the issues that we're letting slide by if I didn't have to go to work every day. I don't think it's good for me to stay there. But like, I am scared that it will be a problem and you will see me as a burden. And I'm worried too that what I contribute around the house won't be enough. I'm worried that helping out more won't make up for the deficit in money.

John, are you curious what she's scared of? She mentioned the word afraid, scared. Are you curious? Beth, what specifically is it that you're scared of? I'm scared of you thinking that I don't help enough. You are so good at doing so much. You keep the house running and you do everything so well that I'm worried that if I step up, it still won't be good enough.

I'm scared that you will not see me as an equitable partner, even though you've never made it seem like you have a problem with it. Beth, I think given your past relationships, it's a totally valid fear. I don't think that it's where we're headed, and I certainly don't feel like that, but

What could we do to make it better so that you didn't feel like that? I think if we were more open of talking about it, like if I knew you would let me know, if I knew that you would come to me and say, hey, you know what? I'm feeling a little worried. Like if I knew that you would come and tell me, I think I would be more reassured. I'm worried you won't tell me.

that you'll just keep it to yourself and it will fester. And that's where the resentment would come from. John, can I ask you a question? Yeah. Are you comfortable with Beth never working again? Yeah, I think so. If Beth didn't have something that she was really passionate about and it wasn't her thing, as long as we could make ends meet and be all right. That's my question. Could you make ends meet for the type of life that both of you want? I think probably.

I know that we have a lot of travel potentially in our future, and I'm not exactly sure what those trips would cost. Seems like kind of an important question, right? Beth, where do you stand on this? Do you think that John would be okay with you never working again? I'm extending this obviously beyond what you think you'll take off of work, but do you think he'd be okay with you never working again? No. No.

Beth, how long of a break are you anticipating on needing from work? Well, I think probably at least three months. I want to look at changing careers completely. I don't want to go back into the field that I'm in, and I need some time to emotionally recuperate from what I've been doing. I also don't know where I want to go next. So I think that...

three, three months, six at the high end. Um, you know, if I need to take time and get a part-time job, I'm more than willing to do that. John, I want to know when you expect for her to get a job just because you say it doesn't mean she has to agree, but are we talking about three years from now? Are we talking about three decades? What are we talking about here? Generally, I would expect Beth to have, uh, another job in a year.

I would like to definitely have a job for the year, Mark. I am hopeful. I'm a little nervous, I'll admit, because I am looking at changing completely. But...

I think that if I can get my mental health under control, I could probably do it in six months. That's what I wanted to ask about. Are you... Sometimes I think... I've heard a lot of stress and it almost seems like we're walking on eggshells. Is it that you're working so many hours? My work is very emotional. I give a lot every day. And that work is often not appreciated. And so...

I'm, I'm, I, I am, I am burned out and I'm a, I'm a, but I'm afraid to leave because I don't want to be a burden. I'm also afraid that I might never want to go back to work. Like legit. Like if I actually get to feel healthy and good, why would I ever want to go back to that job or to any job? That job for sure. But I'm don't,

I don't think that there's a job that... I'm starting to doubt that there's a job that's not going to feel like garbage. Because you've only worked in bad jobs? Lately, yeah. And how did you learn the skill of finding a job? Well, I didn't really learn how to find a job. I came out of grad school in a recession and I just kind of tried to pinpoint what I could do.

And then I just rolled from one job to another. Yeah. Essentially in the same field, doing the same thing. So, and I'm, I'm good at it. So like there's, it's nice to be good at what you do, but it's not good for you. And the way you're talking about it, you basically just rolled from one job to another without being intentional or active in choosing your career. So yeah,

To jump to the idea that there are no jobs out there that would be good for me really reflects that you haven't yet built the foundational skills of finding a job that's your dream job. I've tried to start stuff, but right now I'm so burned out. I was debating on telling you this or not, but I bought the dream job system a year ago. And I can't get through playbook two.

Because I can't actually think about anything I'd want to do. So I go and I look for the careers and I go on LinkedIn and I look and I search the job titles and nothing makes me feel passionate right now. And that's why I want to take some time because I want to try to feel passionate about something again. Well, Beth, everyone on this call wants you to do that. So I think you should hear us all loud and clear, including yourself.

There's no reason for you to be at this job right now. If you can't think of one job that's exciting to you, that is a problem. Okay, listen, I need to tell you all about the dream job program that I have. If you are stuck in a toxic job, or if you are being underpaid, or if you just don't love what you do, this is where you spend eight plus hours a day. You should be working at a dream job. The biggest challenge people have is what is my dream job?

And most of us have never been taught the process of identifying a dream job and then landing it. We just take what's given to us. And like Beth, we bounce from job to job. You can change this and you can learn the skill of landing a dream job. I've helped a lot of people do this, often with $5,000, $10,000, $15,000, even $25,000 raises. To learn more about the Find Your Dream Job program, go to iwt.com slash job.

So, can we all agree that it's time for you to stop this job? Let's take a vote. We'll start with the least important person on this call and we'll go to the most important person. Number one, me. Least important. Yes, I think you should leave this toxic job. John, what do you think? John is also in agreement. Okay. You should leave the job. And how about the most important person in this decision, Beth? I would feel comfortable putting in my notice when we come back from our honeymoon.

That's two months of soul-destroying work away from now. Yeah, that's too long. Yeah. Why is it that I think your mental health is worth more than you do? Because I put really low value on my mental health. Yeah. Obviously. Yeah. And you put a lot of value on... Money. Yeah. Yeah.

And the irony is that when you have a lot of money, which you do, you have $800,000. You don't actually change the way you feel about it at all. Nope. No, I guess. So I see this 50 years from now as the first opportunity for the two of you to have really developed a joint vision with money and it's training wheels.

It's like, okay, John is over here saying, "It doesn't really matter to me. It's fine. We could pretty much spend anything." Beth's over here craving clarity and certainty and saying, "What do you mean anything?" So I would look at it as training wheels that really exposed some fundamental differences in how we think about money. And if you don't solve this and make a system for it, you're going to run into the future problem when it's taking a vacation,

buying another house, having children, and on and on and on. So there needs to be a deeper connection. There needs to be a lot of pre-work that's been done about how you both see money. We've got to start with that confidence and competence. It just doesn't make any sense to worry about $3 questions anymore. How does that strike you?

I think what you said and how you explained it is really concise about the issue. Like hearing you say it, I'm like, oh yeah, that's definitely, this makes a lot of sense, especially what we've been seeing. Okay. John? Yeah, I would agree with that. It definitely sounds like we need to have clearer communication and get on the same page. Talk to me about now. What can you do differently?

It would be really nice to put me first and John second. No offense, because I love you, but like I'm supposed to be putting me first. I'm game. I definitely, I don't want to be scared and I don't want to be worried anymore.

You know, you're about to enter this joint union, which is really serious. You know, it's a business contract. It's for the rest of your lives. And the fact that you're talking to me before you get married means a lot. It really does. And I think the two of you that you're starting to really take this seriously now. Beth finally resolves to put in her resignation notice just before the wedding. So she'll come back to finish her last two weeks on a positive note.

I want to share an excerpt of the follow-up letter that Beth sent to me. I think it's quite revealing. And I'd like to encourage you to get the link from the show notes and get both follow-up letters because they are incredibly interesting. Beth said, "'I am surprised about how emotionally raw I felt during and after the call. I felt really alone. Even with my partner there, I felt really under the spotlight.'"

I realized I was avoiding things because I thought they were too hard and then I was worrying about those same things which I was avoiding. I was surprised at how my avoidance showed up time and time again. Even as a child, I was conditioned to avoid difficult situations and to some extent, all women are conditioned to avoid difficult situations.

So the fact that I am avoiding hard conversations with my partner and asking him to hold me accountable isn't fair to him. I feel like I have a lot of personal work to do.

I'm also surprised and a bit saddened that when I asked for resources, I was rebuffed. I do sincerely want to learn, and I was hoping that I could get more help. The internet is full of shitty money advice, and while I obviously need to reread chapter seven, I was hoping to get more solid references. I find this letter interesting on so many levels, and there's more to it in the show notes.

First, I think it's absolutely incredible that Beth showed up and she engaged with this conversation. That cannot have been easy. Second, I'm glad that there's a reason, an inciting factor for Beth and John to talk about money because they're getting married soon. I did notice that Beth's avoidance showed up in many ways, including her last paragraph.

Asking for more and more resources is simply another mode of avoidance. To put it bluntly, you don't need 10 different books. You need to reread chapter seven. I know that Beth will continue her therapy. She mentioned that to me, and I'm very glad to hear that. I'm wishing the best for her and of course for John, who in his follow-up letter acknowledges that he has been a bit loose when it comes to talking about money and it's not serving them.

I have a lot of confidence for Beth and John. I think that they showed up today and had difficult conversation. I think they know that what they are doing is not working. And I think they both acknowledge that this situation goes much deeper than simply the price of glasses for their wedding. I wish them all the best. And now listen to a preview of next week's episode.

So basically he asks me on a date to go to dinner and I'm like, great. We get the kids to bed. We leave a little later than we had planned. So the place that he wanted to take me was closed. So we leave the house. Doesn't even mention the fact that he invited me to dinner, just drives to the store. I'm like, I thought we were going to dinner. Well, the place I was going to take you closed. And the reason that he wanted to go to that place was because we had to buy one, get one free. And he had a gift card so he could take me to dinner and spend $0. Once that option was off the table,

Dinner, not a word. We didn't, he didn't even mention it. He pretended like it wasn't even said. And it's been almost, what, 18 years since you've been married? What's your advice for everyone listening who wants to have a long marriage? What would you tell them? Not to ask us. We're doing it all wrong. I don't know. Do you believe that? Yes. Really? Why? I feel like it's been 18 years of just hanging on. Really? Really.

Yeah. So we're here. We did it. We're doing it. But gosh, that's tough to hear. If we continue on this path in a few short months, we will get to the point where the money will be gone and we won't have enough. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Ramit Sethi. Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

If you haven't read I Will Teach You To Be Rich, my book, pick up a copy. You can get it at any bookstore or any library, and it will show you the specific tactics for how to build the I Will Teach You To Be Rich system into your personal finances.