Money Dates
"Perfection gets in the way of good. If we're reaching for perfection, then we'll miss the opportunity to make a good decision and inevitably make no decision, which will be poor." Death is the conversation most couples never have. Not because they don't care, but because they're too busy living. Our hosts, Natalie and Dan Slagle, sit with that discomfort in today’s conversation, walking through what the financial situation would actually look like if one of them were gone tomorrow. Using Natalie as the hypothetical (because she doesn't mind talking about death) they trace the real, practical consequences when one of them passes away: business income suddenly cut in half, childcare costs ballooning without a second set of hands, and a $2 million life insurance payout that sounds like a lot until you realize it doesn't come close to replacing a lifetime of earnings. Then there’s the seemingly small yet deadly stuff. Dan couldn't log into their own bank account for a month because two-factor authentication defaulted to Natalie's phone. It took a gentle cornering in the breakfast nook to finally fix it. That's the kind of friction that's an annoyance when your spouse is alive and a genuine problem when they're not. Guardianship is another obvious consideration. Who raises your child if you both go at once? Who manages the money? Those don't have to be the same person. The weight of that decision is exactly what has stalled their own estate plan update since 2020. You and your spouse can never achieve perfection, but you both need to make a good enough decision now. Because no decision, as Natalie puts it, is the worst decision of all. Key Topics: 1. Why Couples Avoid This Conversation (08:16) 2. What Happens Financially if a Spouse Passes Away Tomorrow (15:38) 3. Stock Compensation, Business Ownership, and What Stops Coming In (17:33) 4. A Real-Life Example of Being Financially Unprepared for Loss (21:51) 5. How Having a Child Changes Everything (24:39) 6. Guardianship: Who Raises Your Child, Who Manages Their Money (26:45) 7. The Password Problem: Small Logistical Gaps That Become Big Problems (29:39) 8. The True Cost of Unpaid Labor When a Spouse Is Gone (34:02) 9. The Three Estate Documents Every Couple Needs (38:20) Resources Mentioned: 1. NYT Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/14/your-money/taxes/couples-taxes-mistakes.html [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/14/your-money/taxes/couples-taxes-mistakes.html] 2. Recommended Listen: Money Dates Episode 12: Estate Planning Essentials: Wills, Trusts, and Avoiding Probate: https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/podcasts/estate-planning-essentials-wills-trusts-and-avoiding-probate [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/podcasts/estate-planning-essentials-wills-trusts-and-avoiding-probate] Schedule a Free Consultation: Go to https://www.fyoozfinancial.com [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com] and click the button in the upper right-hand corner Join our newsletter to stay up to date on the latest financial resources: https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/signup [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/signup] Natalie Slagle, CFP® and Dan Slagle, CFP® are the founding partners and lead financial planners at Fyooz Financial Planning [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/] https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/ [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/] — an independent firm dedicated to helping high-earning couples in their 30s and 40s confidently navigate the complexities of managing money together. At Fyooz, they specialize in turning financial stress into strategy, guiding couples through everything from cash flow and investing to aligning money with shared goals. Disclaimer: For updated disclosures, please visit https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/ [https://www.fyoozfinancial.com/]
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