Money For Couples with Ramit Sethi

253. "I’m 53, exhausted, and still living paycheck to paycheck"

15 snips
Mar 24, 2026
Tanya, a household finance manager working in organ donation/project management, opens up about a decades-long cycle of debt despite a high income. The conversation covers shocking numbers, the parent-child money dynamic in their marriage, impulse big purchases like a $23K tractor, the ‘dreamer’ pattern of quick fixes, and practical steps they take to rebuild savings and retirement.
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ADVICE

Cut Grocery Frequency And Set A Concrete Budget

  • Do stop reactive grocery trips: cut shopping frequency to once a week to reduce impulse purchases.
  • Ramit suggests setting a grocery budget (they agreed to $800/month) and make it a shared planning responsibility.
ANECDOTE

Cashing Retirement To Solve Short Term Debt Backfired

  • Tanya cashed out retirement multiple times to pay debt and to fund moves or buy a deli, which temporarily fixed bills but worsened long-term retirement prospects.
  • The deli didn't generate expected income and debt rebuilt again.
INSIGHT

Transcribing Bills Isn’t The Same As Managing Money

  • Tanya has been a 'money transcriptionist' entering numbers without strategic planning, which feels productive but doesn't solve problems.
  • That role perpetuates false control while real choices and boundaries remain unmade.
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