In today’s episode, Cody and Justin bring you a story that's just beginning. This interview with The Incredible Cash Dummy steps through a life quickly changed by having a child in high school and joining the Navy soon after. He then went for years with no financial direction.
A recent military move was compounded with his wife getting pregnant again and her losing her job, he had a major light-bulb moment. A little over a year ago he discovered the financial independence space and has become hooked. Tune in to see how he is correcting his path and taking ownership of his finances.
Episode Summary
Grew up in normal middle class family where they weren’t rich but didn’t have to worry about money
Then during his junior year of high school he gets his girlfriend pregnant and had his son at 17
At this point all he knew about finances was trying to avoid impulse purchases
He continued living with his parents and graduated high school and working part-time at a steak house
The Cash Dummy realized college wasn’t for him so he decided to enlist in the Navy
He was clearing $800 per month and paying $155 per month of child support
His housing and food was covered through the military and he lived on base so he was able to save
His first investing was through the Thrift Savings Plan which is the military’s version of a 401k where he put in 7% of his check monthly
Realized he should take his finances more serous around 2010 when he heard everyone complaining about their stocks and the recession
He then noticed he had been investing unknowingly into nothing but the G fund which is government bonds that are basically just a shelter against inflation
He mentions being lucky that he worked with other sailors who talked to him about finances and walked him through how all the funds work
Gets stationed in Japan and where he receives some extra location pay and benefits from the yen conversion
At this point he is more conscious about investing but still not a great saver
He mentions how the military culture and surroundings of the base can be troublesome for young enlisted and their finances
He talks about the need for military services to make financial training an annual requirement
At 20 he started using credit cards which he struggled to use responsibly
While he struggled with credit cards he never fell into the fancy car trap
He ended up with $10k in credit card debt
He got married in 2013 after 8.5 years in the military and was now an E-6
When the finances got combined their total debt was $15k
They blew all their extra money on eating out and travel and only saved the 7% TSP
He got promoted to E7 and had to move for his next military assignment
His wife was pregnant with his third child and she was going to have to quit her job
All of this led to his light-bulb moment in 2017
She took unemployment for 9 months
His child support has now increased to $900 per month
A coworker introduced bigger-pockets to him and showed him the quad chart video from Brandon Turner
He dove in hard to bigger-pockets including the forums and podcasts
That led him to all the other members of the financial independence space
He sat back for a couple months trying to understand everything before he acted
It then took a few more months before him and his wife were both on the same page
At this point he went from 7% to TSP to 10%
He borrowed against his 401k to pay off high interest credit card loans
He also took on a second job for a while at $16/hr to pay off loans doing janitorial work
There was a fear that all of this would negatively impact their lifestyle but they didn’t notice that at all
He tried YNAB but that didn’t stick
Instead he went to the Anti-budget which fit much better
Now he’s started his own blog, TheCashDummy.com, to help people who found themselves in the same situation and mistakes he did
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