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. You know, money doesn't have to be boring. I get a lot of questions of people who have set up their accounts who have money being saved and they're like,
What now? What's next? How am I supposed to design my rich life? That is why I created the journal. The journal is something you can do either on your own or with a partner. Imagine yourself 15 minutes in the morning. You have a
cup of steaming tea, and you're sitting down following the prompts that help you envision what your rich life is. What's your perfect week? What's your perfect month, year? This journal is designed as a no numbers journal. It's not technical, but it's going to help you understand what you truly value and also what you don't care about.
I recommend you pick up a copy of this journal. You can do it solo or with a partner, and it will help you design your rich life. Get it at any bookstore now. And what happened when he told you exactly how much he had taken out? I was walking home, and he said the number, and I just immediately like, sorry, sorry.
I just immediately was like, am I going to be one of those wives whose husband gambles away all of their money? Everything that I thought I had, that I had been saving for the last year, like working and working and working towards this thing, I didn't have enough money to pay back that loan. How much was the loan for? The initial loan was for $36,000 and then got another $100,000 on top of that, which is the $100,000 she didn't know about.
I thought we were at a different place financially than I learned that we were. I would have been doing things differently. Yeah, I think I would have been doing things differently. Two years ago, Jan took out a $100,000 loan in secret. Emily only discovered it this year as they were buying a house. Both of them are in their mid-30s. Now, here's my question for you. If you were in this situation, what would you do now?
Think about this. What if it wasn't as extreme as a secret $100,000 loan, but what if you found out that one of you spent $5,000 on a vacation that you can't afford? Or what if one of you spent $1,000 on your daughter's birthday party, which means that you now can't contribute to your IRA this year?
In any relationship, you will see money differently than your partner. But when secrets and lies emerge, it can strain a relationship more than you ever expected. I'm Ramit Sethi, and this is I Will Teach You To Be Rich. We just bought a house. And during that process, I learned that Jan had taken out quite a large loan without my knowledge.
So we got through it. We, you know, we got the house, we moved through everything, moved through kind of normally. And I knew intellectually that there was probably some emotional stuff that I wasn't really processing because I still felt a lot of anger. And so I definitely filled it out in a place of anger, you know, kind of, I don't know, kind of wanting someone else to say, to like back me up in a way, even though I know that's not the
the right way to go about it. But I, you know, I still do think that there are some very necessary things that we could and should talk through, not only emotionally, but financially. So was that the idea that we come on this and then, and we do two-on-one against Jan? Yeah.
No, no, I think truthfully, when I filled it out, I didn't think that I didn't go anywhere. I was kind of in my head like, but I literally came home that night and I told Jan, I have a lot of anger and I know that I'm not working through it. And I sort of feel like you are already through it. Okay, hold on a second. I need to make a quick comment on internet psychology right here.
Emily says she filled out the application without thinking it would go anywhere. This totally blows my mind because for the last 20 years, including today, I get emails and social media comments from trolls, just multiple paragraphs of pure vitriol. And you know, I write back, I write back, I go, Oh, Michael, thank you so much for your thoughtful comment. Are you having a bad hair day?
you know, just to fuck with them. And 50% of them are completely shocked. They write back, by the way, I have the metrics on all this. I track the metrics. I have subcategories for trolls. I need to talk about this on another podcast. Anyway, 50% of them are completely shocked. They go, oh my God, I didn't actually think anyone would read this.
Which then raises the question, why would you write 10 paragraphs about your angry reaction to a picture I took of a slice of pizza in the West Village? And of course, I have to ask them this question. When I point this out to them, they become absolutely enraged. I love it. Like it's just gone. Like it's just chill. You're like happy that I figured it out and there's no more...
There's no more conversations or making up about it. We're just moving on to the next thing. I know that I got caught in a lie and that sucked. And I just would...
don't want to do it again and i just want to do whatever i can to make emily feel comfortable that she's able to trust me going forward you know okay jan take me through what happened from your perspective so you were both applying for this house and what happened well so we were applying for the house and then um i had initially gotten um
like a small loan during COVID. We did, together. Together we got the loan and then at some point I received an extension to increase that loan. Initially I just applied for a small amount, just thinking this would be a good backup
or like an emergency fund scenario. And then when I got approved, I got approved for the entire loan amount, which was way more than I was honestly looking for. And then I sat with that a couple of days and then I was just thinking that this would
helped me kind of redirect my career. I was just hoping that that would be able to get me back on track. How would the extra loan money help you get on track? Well, I was thinking, okay, cool. I can use this to start some kind of a small business or use it to generate some income for the lifestyle that both Emily and I want. How much was the loan for?
The initial loan was for $36,000 and then got another $100,000 on top of that, which is the $100,000 she didn't know about. And if I were to give you $100,000 in cash right now, would you know what to do with it?
Given what I know right now, not right now, but two years ago, I did because the market looked a lot different. I would be a lot more cautious now. Wait a second. You can't say two years ago, I know where the market would have gone. So I would have put it in this stock. That's okay. That's not how it works, but okay. Yes. How were you thinking you would make money from that 100K?
I was thinking that I could use it to maybe buy some rental investment properties or start some kind of a small business on my own. Both of us were in the real estate field. So now thinking back, it was totally a bad idea. But at the time, it seemed like my
solution out. And then I took it and then I didn't tell Emily about it. And then it just became this snowball that I became ashamed of. And that's how we ended up not knowing about it. There's this middle class idea that if we suddenly got our big break, if someone finally responded to our email, or if an investor finally saw the genius in us and made a bet on us, we would make it.
And when people actually get a one-time large infusion of cash, they almost never know what to do with it. How would they? They can barely plan out a meal at Cheesecake Factory on Saturday night.
investing money is a skill. Spending money is a skill. That's why I insist on you starting as early as possible, even with 50 bucks a month, because that's how you build the muscle so that when your income increases and your portfolio size increases, you know how to manage it properly. Emily, how did you find out? I found out we were already under contract and our lender,
she was requesting some information about this small business loan that I, again, when we took it out, it was at the beginning of COVID. Jan had lost his job, which we knew we'd be set up for like the whole year. That was, we were aware that we were like set up
And so when he lost his job, it was all on me. And I had just started a new job, which is all commission-based. So we knew at that point, okay, right now I have enough money to pay off that loan if we need. So I knew that like, okay, if we're taking it, I have the ability to pay it back
But it would give us a little cushion still considering or thinking that COVID would be done faster. And so when our lender called and said, "Hey, I need these documents." It was like days that had gone by.
And Jan keeps most of our... He's very organized. He has everything in files. Everything is there. So I was like, babe, just send her the stuff. It's all good. Just send her the stuff. And after a few days of that, I noticed that his mood was getting really weird. He kept saying, they keep asking us for stuff. They keep asking us for stuff. And I was like, we haven't done anything wrong. Open book. Send them all. And eventually he just said, I need to tell you something. I made a mistake. And we were already...
like a week and a half or two weeks into the home buying process already. And what happened when he told you exactly how much he had taken out? I was walking home and he said the number and I just immediately like, sorry, I just immediately was like, am I going to be one of those wives whose husband like gambles away all of their money? Like I just immediately was like,
Everything that I thought I had that I had been saving for the last year, like working and working and working towards this thing, I didn't have enough money to pay back that loan. Like I didn't have it. So now I think I was angry because now I'm in debt too. I thought we were at a different place financially than I learned that we were. And I think if I had known, I would have been doing things differently. Yeah, I think I would have been doing things differently. Yeah.
Still tough to think about, isn't it? Yeah. I mean, I think I just...
I think in that moment, like the fear of just like having no money and being, being very poor, like really, and being in debt. Like, I think this idea of debt absolutely terrifies me. And I, I hold a lot of pride in knowing that I'm not in debt. Um, and so I think with that, it just, it really, I felt betrayed. I definitely am one of the people that's like, ah, like,
I'm making the money, like just, you know, handle it. And, and I trust he's so good, but he's like, he is incredible with business ideas and moving us forward and like big thinking. I mean, he's the one that taught me about investing in all of these things. And so I think I just sort of was like blindly letting that happen. And so I think when I found out
I mean, at first, I didn't know the extent. But when I heard the number, I just immediately was like, I'm in debt. We have no money. Everything just felt very dark and scary. And I think I was angry because...
I've always known that Jan has this complex about like needing to be the provider and needing to contribute and needing to like make more money. And that's not how it's been the last couple of years as he's transitioned because of his job loss. And I hold no issues. I have no problems with that, but he really does. And I think this kind of accumulated into this thing that kind of just got, you know, bigger than it was meant to be in the first place.
Hmm. Thankfully, there was a little part of it that was a relief because I've been taught, we've been talking through all of COVID and I know I can see that like things feel heavy for him and things feel very bleak. And so I could tell. And so once this finally came out, it was very clear what some of the weird energy was. Jan, what do you, what's your reaction from hearing Emily share that?
It sucks to know that I was the one that made her feel that way. And I wish I didn't. There was a certain part of me that was probably ashamed of me needing this help in the first place. And then the shame turns into like, okay, I'm never going to tell you. Yeah. Yeah.
One of the things I noticed is that you mentioned you didn't think about anything that could go wrong. It was all about all the things that could go right. Classic lack of risk management. And this is the thing that's not sexy, right? People go, oh my God, I saw somebody on TikTok telling me I can buy 10 houses with 50K down. And they go, I'm going to be rich.
But they never want to take time, even 25 minutes, to think about what could go wrong. Sure. Emily, you're nodding. Does this resonate with you at all in terms of Jan's decision? I was more nodding along with just kind of the not weighing the risks. It was just so out of character. And that's how I know that emotionally, the weight of just wanting to see a bigger number in his bank account
That was, I mean, that it, it caused him to do something that is truly so out of left field for him. That must worry you because if he could do that, then what else is he capable of doing so that he can have more money? I, you know, I, I think more of it. I don't feel, I don't feel scared that he's going to do it again. I think I look at the way that he kind of opened up emotionally about things and sort of some of the stuff that,
I said would need to happen in order for me to feel like he was doing the work. Because I felt like the last couple of years, there was a lot of emotional assistance that I couldn't provide that I wanted him to see a therapist. I felt that was really important. And he did start doing those things. Because I think that's a script that I can't break down, that I need someone else to do because I didn't come from that. So I don't know how to talk. I don't have a lot of
I think it's silly, like to a certain extent. So I just don't have the tools to talk with him about it. Long story short, I don't feel scared that he's going to do it again. I think it was really out of character and I think it came from a place of severe insecurity. And I think that now, and it was so long ago, I mean, that was still in 2020. Yeah, that was still in 2020 and I only found out about it
in the middle of 2022. And I think that we as a couple have come a long way and he sees what I'm capable of doing in my career. And I think that that gives him a little bit more security where maybe he knows that those things are not necessary to do when they have that much risk. Okay.
A lot of good things there. The fact that you encouraged him to see a therapist, Jan, the fact that you are doing that, the fact that you've had a lot of healthier conversations. I mean, all this sounds very positive. Mistakes happen. Bad decisions happen. Jan, I mean, you've said it multiple times today. You apologize. Emily, you've accepted it, it seems like. And it seems like you're both moving forward. So I'm really pleased to hear you talking so openly about
I'm really enjoying this conversation. Yes, Jan made a mistake, a really dumb one, but he's owned up to it. And Emily has acknowledged what happened and she's accepted it. She said she's not concerned. He'll do it again. I know a lot of you want me to sit here and beat Jan up, but that's not what this podcast is about.
Everybody makes mistakes with their money. And you will often see me surprisingly compassionate when somebody does not know how to start investing. I mean, 90% of the time, the people on the show don't even read my book. I'm not going to blame them. I'm here to help them. Now, I do get mad when people don't take responsibility for their actions. But Jan has.
He's acknowledged it. He's making amends. And I applaud him for that. And I applaud his partner, Emily, for accepting that and being so candid. Now I want to go deeper. Again, I'm not interested in beating him up, but I want to make sure he understands why he took that loan out. Because if he does, he can get to the root cause of his lie around money.
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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and be able to live the lifestyle that we want to live. Traveling, I mean, our relationship is based on traveling almost. Did you meet while traveling? Yes, we both met while we were traveling. So I think recently we've also discovered that we...
We want to build a life together where we can, I mean, this is going to sound cliche, but we can just pick up and go and live in Mexico for a month if we really wanted to. And obviously my side of that is I want to be the provider, I guess. Provider means what? Be able to pay for it all. Oh, so should Emily work in your view?
Yes, absolutely. Okay. So you're paying for it all. So what's she working for? Fun money. I mean, she makes a lot of money. That's a lot of fun for the amount she makes. I don't know. I'm messed up in my brain, I guess. Do you think Emily can be a provider? Absolutely. Is she the provider right now? She is, yes. And if she's the provider, what does that make you? Uh...
I don't know. Like, I don't know. Not the provider or not the, I don't know. Makes me feel like I then don't really have, I don't want to say a purpose, but yeah, something along those lines. What is this? Has anyone else noticed on the episodes where women make more than men, the men seem to be completely lost? And by the way, don't just blame the guys for this.
This situation represents a total disruption of how gender roles have functioned for longer than any of us have been alive. In business, there's a phrase, culture eats strategy for breakfast. What this really means is that company cultures are notoriously hard to change.
Now multiply that by a thousand and you have gender roles. They are multidimensional. They are omnipresent. And they exist in things as large as pay structures and jobs and in rituals as small as who gets past the check. And what do your mom and dad say to you when you're a little kid? What we can take away, well, we can take away many things from the last few episodes like this,
But one thing is for sure, many men see themselves as the provider. And if they are not the provider, then that raises the question, what are they? What is an example where two people, one of them is a provider? What comes to mind for you? I think of like the 50s. Like the husband makes all the money, the man does all the stuff, and the woman kind of takes care of the home. Like that's what I think when I think
Think provider. And is that your relationship right now? No. Oh, no. They're both laughing like incredulous. Emily, how would you characterize your relationship right now? In this season, it's definitely...
I mean, it is definitely I have some very feminine aspects, but I mean, Jan does our laundry like that's what I just don't, you know, but I also love to make a home. And so it's very we are our gender roles are quite flip flopped. I don't know if Jan if that's what he thought he would have in life, but like that's that's what it is. And it seems to work at this moment in this season.
Jan, how would you characterize your relationship? I love it. I mean, I don't care about... I mean, I could care less if she makes food or does the cooking. I don't care. I just do the laundry because I need clean clothes. And her laundry is there as well, so I might as well do it. So I...
I don't care for things like that. But yet somehow, whilst I say that, then my brain is like, well, I need to be the provider. In your family, was that the case? It was and it was. Well, it was not. And then it was. Emily wants to jump in here. Go ahead, Emily. No, his mom was a single mom for the first 10 years of his life until she remarried his dad. And your mom has worked
Your whole life. I mean, she took care of literally everything. My upbringing, bringing in my culture that I come from is probably a little bit different from the norm. But that doesn't say that I didn't grow up in a culture which is very much stuck in the 50s and 60s. Which culture is that, Jan? From South Africa. Okay. So today in South Africa, is it still primarily men that earn money?
I would say it's shifted a little bit. In our friend group, no, but not in all of your family. Yeah, I see. So would it be fair to say the younger generation is more mixed in terms of who earns money and the older generation is more men primarily earning? Sure, yes. Okay. I mean, that sounds familiar. That's what a lot of American listeners will resonate with.
So that must be a little confusing to have these traditional ideas of the man is the provider versus now where there's more women graduating from college than men. So I want to go back to this 100K loan. You took the 100K loan out. The logical side of you said, I can use this to make money. Although in retrospect, it doesn't seem like there was really a plan with that money. Is that fair to say? Yes. Okay.
The other side of you said, I will take this money because it will allow me to what? I mean, to be, I don't want to say be the savior again, but like to start doing my part. Contributing. Yeah. Lower earners are always using the C word.
And this is a fascinating example because I often speak to people where in a male-female relationship, the man earns more and the woman uses the contribute word all the time. How am I going to contribute? Am I contributing enough? I know I'm not bringing enough money, but I'm contributing in other ways. Here we have exactly the opposite. Jan, you're the perfect example, Jan.
where it's not necessarily about gender when it comes to that C word, but it's about the person who's not bringing in as much money.
I think this is absolutely fascinating. And I have a personal prediction that many of the financial scenarios that we associate with men or women are actually going to turn out to be more about the higher earner and the lower earner. And we will only discover this as women begin to out-earn men in different scenarios and geographies.
We already see this. We see things like contribution. That's usually associated with the lower earner. And that tends to be women for a variety of historical reasons. But that's changing. And so in this scenario, we hear the word contribution. But this time it's from the lower earner. We're going to see things like financial control. When you hear stories about men controlling their partner financially,
Those are almost always about men. But I think we're going to see that as women earn more, we're going to hear more and more stories about financial control in that way. In fact, we even heard it recently on this podcast. So stay tuned as generational trends shift, as earnings shift, we're going to discover that the psychology part of money becomes even more interesting. One of the worst feelings in life is feeling stuck.
You hear it sometimes with podcast couples here. They feel stuck around their money. I felt stuck in my business. I had made a bunch of decisions years ago and I woke up feeling trapped. So after thinking about it, feeling stuck, not sure what to do, I went to a CEO council that I'm a part of and I just laid it out. And after listening to me, they were like, oh, it's so obvious. You need to change this, move this person over here, change this resource allocation. Boom.
I wish I had done it years earlier. If you feel stuck in your career and you also wish you had a group of peers who could help you get unstuck,
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and join thousands of top senior leaders from companies like Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta who have taken the first step towards accelerating their careers. That's sidebar.com, S-I-D-E-B-A-R.com slash R-A-M-I-T. When I was in my early 20s, I was not into clothes. I wore free t-shirts from tech companies, and I really did not want to seem like I tried too hard.
But I started to realize that clothing is the first thing people see about you. They don't see how nice I am or how much I know about personal finance. They see what I'm wearing. And like it or not, that shapes a lot of how people perceive you.
Now, I take a lot of pride in the clothes I wear and I love knowing that when I buy something, I'm going to keep it for years and I know that the people who made it were paid well. I actually hired my wife who runs Next Level Wardrobe, a luxury personal styling company, to style me for my Netflix show and all of my events, including what I wear day to day for more casual outfits. If
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Elevate your style using Next Level Wardrobe at nextlevelwardrobe.com slash Ramit. That's nextlevelwardrobe.com slash Ramit. Emily, what did you grow up with in terms of money? What kind of family did you come from? Were you middle class? Tell me more about that.
So my mom was the supporter and she would always just make it work. We never knew that there was any issues, whereas my dad was like, we can't afford that, we're poor. I don't think we were ever poor. I just think it was like this fear. And he's still like that. He's totally fine. I'm sure he's set, but like... He still says we're poor, we can't do it. Yeah. Oh, yeah. And what do you take away from that?
You know, I mean, my dad has said stuff to me before, like you guys spend more money than anyone ever. And I just have to be like, dad, you actually don't know anything about our finances. Like I don't need, I don't need the, the negativity. Right. Um, yeah. So he, he's still very much like that. I think I carry a lot of shame when my parents comment on the type of life that we want to live or how we want to spend. What they say, what are the phrases they use?
frivolous and wasteful and diva. These kind of words that just make me feel like having money is bad. Just that there's never enough. Even if you think you're fine, you might not be. He can't stop talking about right now how his
stocks have like now his retirement is screwed up and you know we were there the other day and luckily yon stepped in because i was like like i just i immediately start getting nervous about that i don't want to hear about how life can go horribly even if you work your entire life and make a lot of money like it just feels very scary to me um so yeah he's
Yeah, he can't stop talking about how everything that's happening in the world and in our politics and whatever and how now his retirement is, you know, I don't know. It just feels very scary. Maybe his feelings about money actually have very little to do with how much he has in the bank. Maybe it's actually just about him. Yeah. Is that possible? Yeah, that's definitely possible. If we gave your dad a million extra dollars tomorrow, you think he would start feeling happy and skipping outside in the sunshine?
I think he would at first, but I think he would quickly start to be like, you know, a million isn't that much money. If you feel anxious about money, having a million dollars is not going to change that. If you feel scared about money, a million dollars is not going to change that. If you spend everything you've got at $75,000 a year, you will probably spend everything you make at $250,000 a year.
The best predictor of your future self is your current self. And if this sounds depressing, allow me to suggest a gentle reframe. I actually love hearing this, that my future self is best predicted by my current self because it means if I want to change myself tomorrow, I can start with myself today.
If I'm not saving anything, I can pick up I Will Teach You To Be Rich from the bookstore or the library and start putting away $100 a month. If I need more help, I can join the money coaching program. If I am afraid of money, I can listen to this podcast and use the I Will Teach You To Be Rich journal to plot out what my rich life is and then make it happen.
I love this because it lets me know that I can take control of my financial life. And I hope that's how you see it too. I don't get that sense that you are constantly worried about money, except in little peculiar ways like having $80,000 in a savings account.
What do you think that's about? We were actually just talking about this today. I feel very split because in certain points, I'm like, you only have one life. Just spend it. But then suddenly something costs more than I thought it was. Or like yesterday...
the train that we were planning on taking was totally full. So we had to get another hotel where we were earlier and we had to, you know, and then I immediately was like, okay, now we've spent more than like, I thought we were going to, now it feels, now it feels very scary. And suddenly I'm like, I'd rather do like a cheaper dinner, even though it was, you know, only $100
70 bucks or whatever for a hotel for an... It's just... I don't know. I feel very flip-floppy depending on... Kind of an interesting reaction you just had. Not what I expected. So my thought was you have a lot of money sitting in cash probably because you're afraid of losing it. Probably because your dad told you for 50 years, oh my God, all the things that can go wrong. My thought was you could probably be investing more of that and earning more. Your reaction was...
I should spend it more on a dinner. You see the difference? The opposite of saving to you is what? The opposite of saving is spending. Okay. Is that it? So your two options are to save money or spend it? I never really thought of it that way, but sort of either it's in your bank account or you can use it. And is there a third option?
What do I do with my money? Invest it. Yeah. Why invest it though? What do you get? You get longer term results. It's a higher return on the stuff you make today, compound interest. It sets you up for the future so that you don't have to worry about how much is in your savings account. Gosh, I find you so interesting. You know all this stuff, it rolls off your tongue and yet you're not investing that much. Why is that?
I don't know. I think, um, you know, just really, I think that growing up, I also have always like dad will always remind us that, you know, credit cards or investing in the stock market is like gambling. Oh God. I know. I know. Okay. And then you believe it right after you hear it 50 times. Honestly, I, I,
I didn't grow up even remotely talking about 401ks, investing, Roth IRAs, nothing. And then being a gig worker before this, we never had any of that stuff. And I truthfully never thought about it. And so the last couple of years has been the first time where I've been like, I guess I should have some things set up to do some kind of a retirement thing. Emily, do you know how much money you make per year? Yes. How much?
Last year I made just over $190,000 and this year I'll probably make somewhere in the $180,000. Okay, how much did you make, Jan? Like maybe $70,000, maybe a little bit less, I think. $70,000, okay. Yeah, maybe more like $65,000, yeah.
Before coming on the show, Emily and Jan filled out a conscious spending plan, which breaks your spending into four categories, fixed costs, savings, investments, and guilt-free spending. You can download your own copy of the conscious spending plan at iwt.com slash episode 68. Now, as a quick preview of their numbers, their fixed costs are at a pretty healthy 56%.
36% is being spent on guilt-free spending, and that's a number they say they can trim if they need to. They own four properties worth over a million dollars, and they've got about $300,000 left on loans for two of them, bringing their total net worth to about $226,000. But once we get to investments, I see a 3% annual contribution.
Now, all of these are clues. You just hear a bunch of numbers. But when I see these, especially in the conscious spending plan, it tells me a lot about the couple that I'm talking to. Tells me about their priorities. Tells me about probably their fears. And that's exactly what I want to find out right now. I want to find out why they are not investing pretty much anything. Emily makes enough. So why isn't she investing? Okay, great.
So at 180 K you should definitely be investing. It's not the gig worker thing anymore. It's just a lot of money. Okay, cool. We all agree on that. Um, so overall, how would you assess this conscious spending plan? How are you both doing with your money? I would say that I know that we're definitely not, we're not making it work for us really in, in any way. Um,
I know that a lot of it comes from a little bit of a scarcity mindset, just kind of wanting to see that number in a savings account. Because what? If you see it in a savings account or a checking account, what does it mean to you? Well, then you have it. Then in case something bad happens, you just have it. There it is. There it is. See, it's good to have risk management. It's good to be able to say if something goes wrong,
I will be able to access my money. But that's where most people stop. They play defense their whole lives. They go, I want to be able to access it because if something goes wrong and I go, what about something going right?
Well, yeah, for sure. For sure. And I think it's also just the not really knowing. And to be fair, I have never in my life until this point had that much money in an account. So it was very like this amount of money that was sitting in an account has been... I've never had that before. So I think a lot of it is like...
Wait, hold on. Hold on a second. Hold on a second. I appreciate that your income has gone up recently, but do you know this is one of the reasons that I encourage people to invest even when they're making a little bit of money? Because even if you're making $25,000 a year and you put aside 50 bucks a month, at least you get that habit and you start to see that you can live without that $50 a month. Here you are making tons of money and you are
petrified of investing. In fact, the only way you think about money is that it's either save it, which is just sitting there losing money due to inflation, or spending it. And we're talking about like a hotel for 170 bucks. Yeah. But you don't have the muscle developed of investing it consistently. Yeah. Yeah. So we've just started putting some money into Vanguard and all of that stuff. And now, like earlier on today, we were like,
Should we go mutual funds or index funds? I'll just tell you right now, just go index funds. But okay, very good to hear. We can talk about that. That wasn't the question that was confusing you on your investments, was it? Mutual funds versus index funds? Okay, it clearly was.
I have no idea, but I think I'm kind of here... That to me is also very interesting, but there's also a lot of other things that are happening here. And I also would say that mentally, both of us are very... I'm kind of like, we're in Paris, just spend it! And he's kind of like...
oh, but like, should I get the thing with the omelet that's three extra euro? And I'm like, Ramit says, don't ask $3 questions. Wait, this is crazy though. So, so Jan, you're the one who's like a little bit more frugal and you're worrying about the price of the omelet, but then you take out a hundred thousand dollar loan. Yes. I don't know. It's very interesting. Don't you think? I would agree. Yeah. All right. Everybody agrees. All right. Let's continue moving on. Savings is $78,000. What is that?
That's mostly cash on Emily's end. Why do you have $78,000 in cash? Just out of curiosity. Because it's the account that I have set up that my income goes into and it just sits there. It's like I have this comfort of knowing that there's money there, even though I know it could be being used better. What do you feel when you see that number?
I'm just like, I worked really hard for that. Like, that's a very, like, I feel good about it. Like, you know, our home purchase came from that. Like, I, it's like my success-o-meter. It's, it's,
you know, it's this big thing for me. Well, I think it is an accomplishment. I do want to say that. I mean, the fact that you used to work at a gig job and now you're doing quite well, collectively, the two of you are doing very well in terms of your earnings. You have cashflow positive properties, all very impressive in your early thirties, but you came to me. So I'm going to be candid with you. Yep.
What you've done is fantastic from where you've come from. But now it's time to turn the page and think bigger. It's great, but it's not enough. I know a lot of Americans have never heard someone say that because your parents told you you were amazing. And they still call you every night and they compliment you that you brushed your teeth even at 38 years old.
Asian parents are like, you don't have a million dollars by age 30. What the fuck is wrong with you? We came to this country with $70 in our pocket. We put you through college. You can't even get an A plus on every exam in college. The only lie of that last sentence.
is the F word. Asian parents don't curse at their kids. Anyway, I'm proud of Emily, but she and Jan are quite accomplished. It's time to measure them against today, not yesterday. In other words, I need to raise the standards of how they measure themselves. And stashing tens of thousands of dollars in a savings account and being afraid of investing, that's not serving them anymore.
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Are you still nervous about investing? Yeah. I don't know what else to say. Yeah, there is still a piece of it that feels very... I don't know. Intellectually, I know that we should. Intellectually, I know that we should. It still doesn't make it easier to take a chunk of money from this safety pot that I have in my account and just like... Emily, how much do you need in your safety pot to feel safe?
Uh, I, I feel like, I feel like this is where I just start to, to remind myself that like, this isn't a, this isn't a numbers thing. This is a, this is a mind thing. You know, I don't know if I'll ever feel safe. Ah, so then keep going. Finish the sentence for me. Sorry. I don't know why I'm feeling emotional. Um,
Well, I don't know if there's anything else to say. I don't know if I'll ever feel safe. I don't know. I don't know if I'll ever feel safe. Jan, do you want to jump in here? Seems like a pretty interesting topic. I mean, I think we will be safe with $10 in the bank account because we've always figured it out. Try that a different way. Try it instead of telling her.
that you're actually wrong and we are safe, try asking her a few questions to understand where she's coming from. Like I, what makes you feel like, like you are, like we are not safe. We are, if we can, there's anything. Just stop there. Just stop there. You have a good question. Emily. Um, I don't know if there's, if there's one thing, I mean, I,
I, I, truthfully, I don't, I don't think there's like one thing. I think this is just something that I, that I really, I am just, I'm like terrified of just suddenly not, not having what I thought I had. And, you know, I can see that obviously this is like mirroring what happened with this loan. It's just kind of a fear that's coming up there. Can I ask you both a question? Sure.
What does safe mean to you? I think safe feels like comfortable. Safe feels like knowing that you're not going to be suddenly ripped from a life that you enjoy. Being able to do the things that you enjoy doing and also...
having like some pride about what you've built. I think all of that going away feels incredibly unsafe. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. I would, I would agree with that. Um, just safe feels like everything will be okay. Like it's not gonna, it's not gonna go away. We can continue living the life that we want to live now. And it,
not just go away like that instantly. Emily, how old were you when your parents got divorced? I was five. Do you remember it? Yeah. Did your quality of life change? It changed with my dad. Yeah. He moved into a pretty, a pretty, like, you know, just like a one, one or two bedroom apartment in kind of an icky area. He eventually bought a home nearby, but definitely, yeah,
He was just a single dad trying to figure it out. It was never cute. Do you think that that affected you until today? I would like to say that it didn't. But now that I'm talking about it, I'm like, maybe. I can see how some of those financial insecurities, I can see how those play out. But I don't think I've ever been asked about the change when the divorce happened.
The idea of going from a certain level of quality of life, a certain level of security to suddenly less and worrying about if it's going to be enough. And then hearing your dad mention that it's not enough, it's not enough for the next 30 years. What do you think? Do you think that that might've affected you? For sure. For sure. I mean, I'm the first person to...
you know, to those moments of we can't, we can't buy that or we can't afford that. We're poor. We're like the moments of standing in the grocery line. Like, can I get this gum? You know, like that's yeah. Yeah. But that's not, that wasn't the case. Like very clearly. I know now that that was not the case, but he, he said that so that we wouldn't ask, you know,
Yeah. For all the parents out there listening, stop telling your kids, we can't afford that. It causes a lot of issues that last a lifetime. There are better ways to teach children than we can't afford it. We choose not to get that. We'd prefer to put our money elsewhere. We bought gum last week and we don't need to buy gum every week. There's so many different ways. And Emily, I'm sorry that you experienced this
repeated concept of we can't afford it. But now we're here. The two of you made multiple six figures last year. And what I'm hearing is that you have these old beliefs about money, both with gender and with safety that may not be serving you in the relationship you want to create today. So how do you propose that we add a new vision for your relationship with money? How do you want to proceed?
I can talk to people about it. I can discuss it and work through it. Even though I probably naturally don't want to do that, that's something I need to do. Fantastic answer. Really appreciate that. And what about for your relationship, Jan? You mentioned the work that you're going to do individually. I think that's amazing. What about for your relationship?
I just want to support Emily in any way I can. And I think maybe better verbalize some of the communication regarding money sometimes. I might not go about it in the best way. Okay. Emily, what about for you? I think, truthfully, I feel like
especially talking about this whole fear thing, I think I might... And the funny thing is that we say we're going to have these money meetings. We continue to say, let's sit down and look at all this stuff. And then we do it once and it's kind of like, okay. We kind of went over a couple of things. I kind of see stuff, but then I'm like,
okay, we looked at what we spent last month and that's what it is. That's why I hate budgets. I fucking hate them. Yeah. And so I feel like if we're looking at this stuff and also looking at the forward trajectory of these things, like, okay, actually looking at what we're investing and doing kind of what
we always say that we're going to do. I think me having a better handle on what the numbers really do look like, forward moving, not just what I see in my bank account. Because that's truly the stuff that I...
I just check out what we spent and I pay off all the credit cards and I make sure everything is kind of there. And then I'm like, okay, we're set. But I'm not thinking so ahead. You literally just gave the best ad for my conscious spending plan that anyone could have given. You're like, I should probably stop looking backwards because it doesn't do anything for me. Instead, I should look forwards, maybe on a percentage basis. I should go to iwt.com slash podcast and download the conscious spending plan.
Okay, you can get your own version of the Conscious Spending Plan for free at iwt.com slash episode 68. Notice how far we've come today. Jan has admitted to taking a secret $100,000 loan. Emily has shared her fears about money. They've both used the CSP to get their numbers out on the table. Now, let's zoom out and look at the big picture. So let's zoom up. Do you two both understand
Why you're investing? For the future. What does that mean? So that we have the safety and security when we're older to not have to worry about every small purchase and we can retire when we want to. Okay. Jan, what do you think? Why are you investing? To grow money. Okay. That's kind of interesting, isn't it? Both of you have different reasons for why you're investing. One says safety and the other says to grow it.
Do you all think you might want to talk about that first? No, there's complete silence. Do you see why if you two don't understand why you want to invest, and if you two have two separate reasons for wanting to invest, that there's going to be conflict at some point? Because some person might say, we should invest
10%, 20%, 30%. And the other is going to go, why would we? I want money in my savings account to feel safe. And you're not going to understand why you're fighting because you never really addressed the root cause. I think sometimes when you speak about money, it being all about growth, I feel like that it feels very risky. It feels very much like you're kind of the stuff that we've talked about before, but
it feels like you're a lot more chill about just kind of like throwing it out there and trying it. And I still don't feel totally safe. No, I, I, I mean, I, I would say grow. Don't say it. Ask it. Why do you want safety? What makes you feel like you need safety? Well, uh, I think the last couple of years, a lot of the, you know, the, our life has been kind of based on, uh,
on my working. And so I want to know that at some point, if I don't want to do that, all the money that I'm putting into these accounts that like, it's not, you know, if something changes that like suddenly everything that I've worked for is like no longer keeping us afloat, you know? And so it feels kind of freaky for me to take all of this, like this little, this egg that I have
and just be like, I'll just put it all into this account for the future that I can't take out for, you know, 30 years or whatever. Yeah. No, I mean, that totally makes sense. Go further, Yann. I love, I love your direction here. Reflect back to her what you heard. I mean, yeah, I, I, I mean, I can only imagine you've worked. And I mean, I was the first with, I'm the witness of like how hard you worked and like,
how much you've grown and successful and i i can imagine that wanting to or being scared that it's just all for nothing is it's real it's not i can totally imagine that being um like a weight on your shoulders nice and jan what role do you want to play in co-creating your future together i want to be the supporter the
I am your biggest supporter and I want to be, no, I'm not going to use that word. I just want to be present there with you and help you build
will help us build this life that we're talking about. Truthfully, I do feel like that is what Jan tries to do on a more frequent basis. I think when it comes to some of this stuff, though, I feel a little bit out of my depth and I don't feel... I feel like he knows so much more about the way that it should be going.
And, and babe, I think it would be very helpful for me if we are to do this stuff so that we can kind of see, I want to see the number of like what it is that we're working towards. And then I want to be able to see that as I invest that stuff, like that's what's happening. And I want to see the result. I like this conversation. It feels like this is where we need to spend a little bit more time. I just want to be able to communicate better with that, those kinds of words and that kind of language. That's great. That's the start.
You saying that out loud to Emily probably goes a long way. Look, I realized that the way I've been communicating has not been connecting with you. I've got to find a better way to communicate. That goes a long way. You don't even have to find the solution. Just acknowledging that there's a problem is amazing. I know that I put a lot of... Because I didn't want to talk about it or I was scared to talk about it or I just didn't understand. I know that I put a lot of responsibility on him
to take care of it, which is also part of how we got where we are. So I know that I need to be doing some of the heavy lifting as well so that we can be on the same page. Beautiful. I love that. I would like to show you how the numbers actually flow. So let's just start here. Right now, you have about $25,000. And is that money that's invested?
No. How much do you have invested? A thousand bucks of that entire amount is in it. It's all just laying the cash. Great. So you have a thousand dollars and let's say right now you're putting in zero dollars every month. I'm just going to make it simple. And let's say you want to do this for 20 years. Okay. What interest rate should we assume here? What does the book say?
I think eight or nine. Yeah, it says eight. Let's go for seven just to be conservative. So this $1,000 over the course of 20 years turns into about $4,000. Is that a lot? No. No, it's not. So why don't we adapt it? Where do we want to change these numbers so you can start to get a feel for how much you can actually have? Emily, go ahead. We want to be dropping more into the additions. Okay, how much? Uh...
I mean, it should be the 10% of take home. Okay. How much would that be in dollar amounts? Oh God. You're, you're awakening a, an interfere of math right now. It's okay. Babe, you're, I would love if you stepped in and just like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait,
Let's do this. I do. I do feel I want to engage. I feel very like on the spot at the moment. Okay. I'm freezing up. Look, I don't like math either. So I'm going to do it with you. Okay, hold on. I'm going to open this up. We'll do it together. Notice what's happening here. This is very common. If I ask Emily five days from now what she remembers about this very moment, she will not remember a single word that she said, but I guarantee she will remember the feeling of terror
at having to do math on the spot in front of millions of people. The equivalent would be asking me to say three nice things about Wells Fargo on live TV. They were founded in San Francisco. I like that old stagecoach they have. And fuck! What's really going on here is much deeper than her dislike of math. This isn't just about math. I get that it can seem scary. Truthfully, I don't even care if people get the math wrong.
The real struggle here is an unconscious one. And it is about Emily engaging with her money.
And she's going to face scenarios like this for the rest of her life. Whether it's scary math or disagreeing with Jan or being intimidated by an investment option or some scammer from Primerica or Northwest Mutual or some whole life insurance looney tunes on TikTok, she's going to encounter literally thousands of scenarios like this in her life when it comes to money.
This is why I'm gently insisting that she do this with me together. That's also why lots of people join my money coaching program because they need just a little help to get over the hump and feel more comfortable taking control of their money. You can join the money coaching program at IWT.com slash coaching. All right. What are we looking for here? We're looking for the dollar amount of,
that you would invest per year? Where would we find that? Talk it out loud. You don't have to get it right, but we'll do it together. The dollar amount that you would invest per year. Yeah. You'd scroll down to the investment percentage there. And then that should be all the way around the right side. That's 600. Yeah. Right? Bingo.
600 bucks. 600 divided by 12. 600 times 12 because we're doing 600 a month times 12 months. Oh, okay. Got it. All right. This is monthly. Okay. Yep. 7,200. Perfect. Okay. Watch the numbers change. What do you see? What? It went from roughly $48,000 to $360,000. That's happening if you were to automate those investments today.
And that's at 3% of gross, right? That's correct. Now, what do you say we just play for a second and see if we can get this up to 10%? What should we do? Let's just brute force it. Let's make it 5,000. Oh, that's too high. That takes us to 27%. So I'm going to lower this amount to 2,500. That's too high still. Let's take it to 2,000. Okay, perfect.
$2,000 a month. Again, this is just really back of the napkin. $2,000 a month. Now let's see what would happen if we went back and plugged that in. How much should I plug in here, Emily? So $24,000. Yep. $24,000, right? Yeah. Okay. Let's take a look at what happens. Dang. Over a million dollars. This is starting to become interesting now. What do you notice, Emily? I mean, I think I just...
I literally have that amount right now that I could be putting in there. So it's definitely kind of crazy to think that that small little chunk would be over a million before I'm even 55. Correct. And can we play with a couple of these numbers just to show you something? Because right now, I think what we've just done is we've taken these lenses that are on your eyes. What were those lenses that you look at the world through before our call today?
Just like fear and that it's gambling. Yeah. And safety. Like I need safety. And to you, safety is it needs to be sitting in a savings account. Okay. But it's actually costing you over a million dollars. It's actually costing you more than that. What are the new lenses that you're putting on right now? Just for a moment. I'm not saying you have to keep them on, but what are you putting on right now? Just the potential. Yeah. Growth or adventure, potential. Yeah. You have 70K more just sitting around.
Okay. I'm not saying for fun, let's just put all 70K in. How about that? So we do, I'm not saying you have to do it, but I'm just playing. What do you think is going to happen when I push calculate? One and a half million. 1.4 million. It's insane. Let's not do that. Cause I know you want some money saved up just in case for a rainy day. And that's totally fair. How much do you need for a rainy day? How do you decide that amount?
You take what you're planning on, like what your monthly fixed income is, and you multiply it. I think it can either be three months or six months depending, but I kind of feel more comfortable with the six at this moment. I love it. Okay, great. So that means you have how much left over to invest here? I mean, so we have another...
15, probably a little bit more if I really wanted to pull it. All right. So what I want to show you here on this balance is this is how much the money grows every year. First year is 30K, then 32K, then 34K, then 36K. It's sort of steady. All right. But if you...
add that number we talked about, 24,000 per year, look at how the math grows. 30K, 56, 84. So, so far you can see it's growing by a modest amount, 20, 30K a year. That's fine. You're putting pretty much that in. But watch what happens just a few years, by the time you're in your 40s. It grows from 441 to 496. Then the next year, it grows from 496 to 555,000. At a certain point, you're making...
essentially $100,000 a year in growth. And if you keep investing, again, this is just extending it, you're actually making more from your investments than you make from your interest. What does that tell you? And then of course, as our income grows, we can... That percentage, if we're working from a percentage basis, then that annual income or that annual...
contribution will be bigger. So this will grow faster. Nailed it. In fact, let's model that out real quick. So right now your annual addition is $24,000, but you two are young. You're in your thirties. How much do you think over the course of your lifetime that you will be able to annually contribute on average? Is it higher or lower than 24,000? I think higher. I think so too.
So pick a number. I'm not going to hold you to it, but let's just pick a number. I don't know. What do you think, babe? 36. Let's average it out. Okay. I was going to say 50. Well, let's do both. I like it. Okay. 36,000. So you can see here by age 50, you have $1.3 million. By age 60, you have 3.1. By age 70, you have $6 million. Now, how about we change that to 50,000 and then you tell me what you think.
In this case, by age 50, you have 1.8. Look at how fast it starts to grow. By age 60, you have 4.2. By age 70, you have $9 million. Each year, at that point, you're making over half a million dollars in interest alone. I mean, if we want to keep going, by the time you're 80, you have $18 million and you're making over 1.2 million a year in interest. This just shows you the power of compounding. So let me ask you this. Looking at this, Emily...
What occurs to you? Well, I mean, it feels more like inspiring versus scary. It definitely, it makes it like a goal or like a challenge versus feeling like this is something that I have to do and I just haven't. Yeah. And what does it make you think about that money that's sitting in your savings account? Well, it would be doing a whole lot more if it was in one of these, if we invested it. But Emily,
Right now, your beliefs in money, how much are they costing you? Millions of dollars. How much exactly? Look at that number at the very bottom by the time you're 82 years old. Just over $21 million. This conversation has taken some very interesting turns today. We started off with a secret $100,000 loan that Jan took, and we ended with Emily and Jan realizing that they are sitting on potentially over $20 million. Yes.
That is why I love getting couples to engage with money. They often find that they are playing so small. After our conversation, I received a follow-up letter. You can read the full letter at iwt.com slash follow-ups. But here's a quick excerpt of what Emily said.
I have never considered my parents' divorce as something that would inform how I subconsciously feel about money. When Ramit asked me about the change when my parents began living in two separate houses, I can honestly say I've never looked at that specific transition. It was such a small period of time in my life. I have never considered myself being someone who was so afraid of change.
Jan has taken a much more tender stance with me when it comes to our money conversations, and I'm feeling far less insecure and frozen talking about what to do. You can read those full letters again at iwt.com slash follow-ups. Don't forget to download your conscious spending plan at iwt.com slash episode 68. Thank you for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich, and be sure to come back next week to hear my conversation with Chris and Camilla. Here's a sneak peek.
How many of your friends and family and the people around you talk about their house, housing costs, housing investments, etc.? Everybody. It's disgusting. It's a status thing. If you're not playing that game, then you're, what are you doing? Even if it's all fake. One of the things too leading up to this was one of our friends who, you know, we knew didn't make as much money as we did. They were able to buy a nicer home. Uh-oh.
Can't help but feel a little jealous, right? When you bought At The Peak, did you have a conversation that it might go down? Not in depth. It just all kind of came crashing down together. Like we have been, it's affected all areas of our life. This is a constant state of anxiety every night.
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. I will teach you to be rich.