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Introduction

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Besides infidelity, the fastest way to kill an intimate relationship — whether you’re straight or gay, religious or agnostic, married or cohabitating — is to not be aligned with your partner regarding money — how to make it, spend it, grow it, and save it.

That’s right! Money issues are indifferent to your age, gender, sexual orientation, life stage, and upbringing. And despite the material wealth and bright smiles we see on the outside, money issues affect rich couples, poor couples, and those in between.

Sadly, financial incompatibility is the leading cause of separation and divorce in North America — which is a complete shame, because it’s avoidable.

But when couples are pulling in oppos-­­ite financial directions, they won’t reach their financial, personal, and professional goals. This results in hurt feelings, major damage to a couple’s financial progress, and in so many cases, complete relationship breakdown.

As partners, we do our best to love, protect, and uplift our life mates. But far too often we downgrade the importance of financial security below that of travel adventures, weddings, new houses, cars, careers, and starting a family. Sure, these are awesome and deeply fulfilling dreams, but without financial security as the foundation upon which to build these dreams, you’ll become a slave to your loan, credit card, and mortgage payments.

Money issues are indifferent to your age, gender, sexual orientation, life stage, and upbringing.

Can you imagine how stressed and unhappy you would be if you and your partner ran the hamster wheel of debt for decades, never making any financial progress? Well, welcome to the lives of so many unhappy couples who are barely affording their lifestyle and blaming each other for being where they are. You know these people. They’re house rich and cash poor. They’re driving Land Rovers when they still have a landlord.

In contrast, the happiest couples are thought to be those who have high financial compatibility and work toward common goals. These couples make the most of what they have rather than focus on what they don’t have. And many of them aren’t considered “wealthy” just yet — but they’re well on their way to financial success.

No, money can’t make you and your partner happy. But having it, along with a mutual commitment to a financial plan for the future, opens doors for couples. Without money, you and your partner must accept your circumstances — both good and bad — rather than choose what’s best for your future.

Think of it this way: Let’s say you and your spouse are in your early 30s and are without children. You make a combined income of $70,000 and are working hard to save up to move to France. In France, you will both retrain for new careers — you as a chef and your spouse as a restaurateur. After five years of extremely frugal living and both working second jobs, you reach your savings goal of $60,000 together. You rent out your home on a two-year lease, purchase plane tickets to France, and off you go. When you and your spouse complete your training, job offers, as well as offers to finance your very own restaurant, come pouring in. Based on these preliminary offers, it appears that your combined income will be double what it used to be. You have many choices and agree to build a solid plan for your future.

On the other hand, imagine you and your partner are in your early 40s and have two children. Your combined income is $175,000, but you can’t seem to control your spending. As the years pass, your debt load increases. Sure, your family “looks the part,” driving nice cars and living in a fancy house, but you’re strapped and can’t afford anything but your mortgage, credit card, and car payments. Soon enough, after a brief period of unemploy­ment, you’re behind on your monthly payments and creditors begin calling. You and your partner start having fierce arguments — worse than in years past — about money. In this situation, your choices are limited. Your family either repays what it collectively owes, which you can’t afford to do at the moment, or you’ll lose your material possessions.

Having money helps you and your partner create higher-quality options for your future. And that’s why smart couples take the time to build a plan to achieve financial success.

One-Size-Fits-All Doesn’t Fit

There isn’t a prescribed one-size-fits-all financial plan for couples. “Financial success” is defined and created by you. And you’ll know you’ve achieved it when you can choose what you want for your life.

Financial success for one couple could mean retiring at age 65 with $1.5 million in the bank, a home without a mortgage, and nice cars parked in the driveway. For another couple it could mean living and working abroad, building up a small, but sustaining, amount of retirement savings. The second couple would likely define financial success as having seen the world, whereas the first couple would define it as having enough to enjoy a luxurious lifestyle in retirement.

Neither couple’s vision of financial success is better than the other’s. As long as each couple has a plan and both partners work as a team, both couples will accomplish what they set out to do … and be happy in the process.

The Modern Couple’s Money Guide will help you and your partner develop the skills to create a strong foundation upon which you can build your own version of financial success.

Put the Past Where it Belongs

Starting today, you and your partner get to choose how you want your future to shape up, regardless of where you came from, your current bank balance, whether you’re a spendthrift or ridiculously wealthy. If you choose a healthy attitude toward money management, meaning that you use money as a tool to build your dreams, not to accumulate copious amounts of debt for a lifestyle you can’t afford, your financial foundation will become stronger, and you’ll be happier.

Certainly we have all had experiences that negatively impact our attitudes and beliefs about money. But don’t let the past be a barrier to creating a great future for you and your partner.

My early experiences with money, for example, were a mix of good and bad. By all accounts — and sociological statistics — I probably shouldn’t even be writing this book. But rather than letting the financial challenges of my upbringing dictate my financial future with my life partner, I let them fuel my passion for building financial success.

You can do the same — leave the past in the past, especially if it’s likely to have a negative impact on your future. Just learn from it. This may mean forgiving your partner for being financially irresponsible, setting healthy financial boundaries, or dramatically altering behaviours that are counterproductive to making progress on your money.

For example, you may have had a very luxurious lifestyle in a previous relationship. Perhaps you and your partner brought home a combined income of $750,000 annually. Fancy clothes, cars, electronics, trips, and houses were literally at your fingertips. But, for whatever reason, the relationship didn’t work out. Now you’re with your new love and have a fraction of the resources. He or she is a part-time fitness instructor, and you’ve transitioned into a lower-stress role as a marketing coordinator, versus your prior role as a marketing director. Your new household income is $90,000.

Is it fair to be upset with your new partner for not making as much as your previous partner? No, of course not! Your new partner is a different person with a different career altogether.

Is it wise to carry on spending as if you still had access to a $750,000 annual income? No, that would be foolish and would cause you and your partner financial hardship.

Is it fair or wise to fantasize about the material possessions you used to have? No. Living in the past will make you resentful about your current situation and it won’t change your future. The only thing that will is learning from it.

When I was growing up in Toronto, Edmonton, and Calgary, my parents had very little money due to job instability, debt, and poor financial skills. As a family of five, we lived at the government-deemed poverty line for well over a decade. A small income of $24,000 per year put food on our table, a roof over our heads, transit passes in our hands, and clothing on our backs — second-hand, of course. As a result, we were forced to live a frugal and fun life, wasting nothing. I never had new clothes, shoes, bikes, or school supplies until I could afford to buy them myself with the earnings from my own part-time job in my teenage years.

Numerous times throughout my childhood, my parents would take my brother, sister, and me to the grocery store or Walmart, and load up the cart. When it came time to pay, they didn’t have enough money. So we would go home empty-handed, and in some cases, hungry. Not surprisingly, on those days my parents would argue about their money situation; the three of us children could overhear from adjacent rooms. Like clockwork the next day, my mother or father provided my siblings and me a “what-not-to-do” lesson in money management. “Learn from us and don’t repeat our mistakes” was the core message.

My parents ultimately divorced after years of financial, personal, and professional misunderstandings. They were on different financial pages and had been for years.

From watching my parents, I learned early on that money issues in relationships are rarely just about money. Often it’s the “meaning” (attitudes and beliefs) behind the mismanagement of money that drives a wedge between couples. For example, one partner might feel the other was being selfish when purchasing an expensive television without consulting the other. Or, as in the case of my parents, clear financial boundaries were never established and resentment built steadily between them.

I was fearful of never having enough, just like my parents, and of failing in my own marriage. But rather than letting these negative experiences shape my future, I took them to heart, channelled my fear into motivation, and created a strong financial foundation.

I reprogrammed myself and the relationship I had with money so that it wouldn’t destroy the relationship I have today with my intimate partner.

You and your partner can do the same and create a happy future.

Don’t let past negative financial experiences, attitudes, and behaviours dictate your future.

Three Pillars for Savvy Couples

Savvy modern couples take a three-pillared approach to building their lives and financial security together. They focus on strengthening their financial, personal, and professional lives.


When these pillars are strong, they are the foundation that supports a couple’s future. This in turn allows them to achieve their full financial potential while feeling happy in the process. When any of these pillars are weak, a couple’s foundation is weak, and it’s hard to build a lasting structure on a cracked foundation.

Think of it like this: If one partner is a spender and compromises the couple’s retirement savings because they bought too many handbags or car accessories, that will cause stress in the relationship. Stress impacts personal happiness and productivity at work. When a couple supports and respects each other’s career aspirations, their collective income will grow, which strengthens their finances and generates better options for their future.

Or think of it like this: If a rich couple defines themselves by their wealth, rather than focusing on building a healthy relationship with each other, their friends, and their family, they’ll push each other and their social circle away. Regardless of their bank balance or career success, they’ll be miserable.

With so many competing priorities for your time, talents, and resources, it can be a challenge to place equal emphasis on your financial, personal, and professional success. But rich couples do — and so should you.

From Broke to Oprah

At the age of 17 I was fortunate enough to meet one of the most influential women in the world — Oprah Winfrey. I was featured on her show in an episode called “Ordinary People, Extraordinary Wealth.” I was one of a few guests sharing their financial secrets with more than 20 million viewers! My story stood out among those of the other guests primarily because of my young age, passion for financial literacy, and high bank balance.

I was on track to be rich — and able to retire, if I wanted — by the age of 30.

Coming from a low-income household inspired me to earn and save my money early on so I wouldn’t have to experience the same hardships as my parents. From age 10 to age 14, I purchased Canada Savings Bonds with my birthday money every year.

I worked two flyer routes, babysat, sold lemonade, and picked weeds to earn money that I saved in a savings account until I was legally allowed to work at the local public library at the age of 14. From that time, every dollar that made its way into my hot little hands was deposited into my growing mutual fund account.

Thankfully, I took my investing quite seriously as an adolescent and read up on my hobby between my shifts at the library — MoneySense, Forbes, Fortune, the Globe and Mail, the Wall Street Journal, The Wealthy Barber. What I learned in the pages I read, I shared with a very kind and patient bank manager who worked across the street from my home.

I asked questions. I made mistakes. I fixed my mistakes. I consulted my parents. I grew my knowledge.

Before long, I had accumulated more savings than my parents, and had nearly enough to pay for my own university education.

In grade 12, my financial savvy was noticed by one of my teachers. She and I had enjoyed many conversations about investing and how to engage my peers in starting to save early on. When the local newspaper randomly phoned my high school one day looking for stories of “odd or interesting” students, my teacher proudly put my name forward.

The newspaper published a front page article entitled “Whiz Kid,” which was then syndicated across North America. Shortly thereafter, in February 2001, I received a phone call from a producer at The Oprah Winfrey Show. Oprah had read the article and wanted me on the show to share my story. The rest is history.

As you know, Oprah has a massive influence on the lives and careers of the people she touches. I’m grateful to her because she’s the primary reason I was able to go on to write two bestselling books: Rich by Thirty: A Young Adult’s Guide to Financial Success and Well-Heeled: The Smart Girl’s Guide to Getting Rich.

The experience I had with Oprah, along with wise guidance from my mentors and family, has helped shape me as a person. It’s also influenced my business, MeVest, which is an online money school that provides financial education through one-on-one money coaching, eLearning, and financial planning.

Why Couples Matter

I care about improving financial literacy for couples because strong couples build strong families, communities, and workplaces. They are happy. They are inspirational.

But in my work as a professional speaker and the founder of MeVest, I’ve noticed a disheartening trend among 30- to 50-something couples. Most fight about money regularly because they don’t know how to navi­gate difficult money conversations and they lack the skills to establish a strong financial foundation. Without major intervention, nearly half of these couple will end up negotiating separation agreements or signing on the dotted line of their divorce papers.

I full-heartedly believe that money matters don’t have to continue destroying relationships. Instead, money can be used as a tool to help couples achieve their goals and dreams.

Seven Steps to Financial Bliss

If you’re reading this book as a last-ditch attempt to get rich quick and save your relationship, I have bad news for you — money can’t fix your relationship.

You and your partner need to create a strategy for your future and your money together. When you’re aligned on where you want to go — even if it’s just a mutual commitment to read this book at this point — The Modern Couple’s Money Guide can show you how to get there by using these seven steps to build wealth together:

1 Get on the same page

2 Scrap your emotions and sort out your accounts

3 Curb overspending

4 Get the hell out of debt

5 Own the walls you live in

6 Invest like a pro

7 Design your master money plan

When combined, these steps will help you grow your net worth, which is the money you have left over once you subtract what you owe (liabilities) from what you own (assets). To build your net worth, you and your partner must increase your assets and reduce your liabilities (also known as debts). If you do the opposite, your net worth will shrink and eventually become negative. The stronger your net worth, the better the quantity and quality of your choices for the future.

The stronger your net worth, the better the quantity and quality of your choices for the future.

The Modern Couple’s Money Guide will teach you and your honey how to navigate through tough financial conversations without criticism, bickering, screaming, name-calling, shouting, or finger pointing. It also reveals the secrets of how financially successful and happy couples build a solid financial foundation — and how you can, too.

Building an incredible financial future with your life partner starts with open communication, respect, and a plan for the future. To reach your full financial potential, you must strengthen not only your finances but also your personal and professional life.

Enjoy the read!

The Modern Couple's Money Guide

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