The Stacking Benjamins Show
Today's show asks one of the trickiest questions in personal finance: when does a good habit go too far? Saving is great. Cutting expenses can change your life. Earning more can open doors. But what happens when you optimize so hard that you accidentally squeeze the joy out of the whole plan? Joe, Doug, Diana Merriam from EconoMe, New York Times financial writer Paulette Perhach, and Doc G from Earn and Invest dig into the messy middle between YOLO and never spending a dime. Plus, Doug brings hockey trivia, the panel talks odd jobs, and everyone tries to define what "enough" actually means. You'll see very quickly why this episode is an integral part of greatest hits week! What You'll Walk Away With Why reducing expenses works best when it removes waste -- not when it turns your life into a deprivation contest Diana's throw-pillow test: how to ask whether you actually want something or just inherited the idea that you're supposed to want it The difference between frugal and cheap -- and why ironing hotel toast or stealing dealership coffee might be a sign you've crossed the line Why Doc G says saving money is only useful if it eventually becomes fuel for the life you want to live The case for "YOLO responsibly": automate the saving first, then give yourself room to spend without turning every purchase into a morality play Why high savings rates can be powerful in your 20s -- especially when friends turn frugality into a shared goal instead of social isolation Paulette's reminder that money habits aren't just math; ADHD, dopamine, entrepreneurship, and self-compassion can all change how saving feels Why earning more often matters more than cutting more -- and how Diana's denied raise helped push her toward building her own thing Doc G's hospice-doctor warning: nobody gets to the end wishing they had worked more nights and weekends to hit a slightly bigger net worth Why Coast FI may be the healthier goal for some people: save enough to create options, then stop tolerating work or lifestyles that no longer fit The guardrails idea: avoid both extremes -- wasting your future and wasting your present Why This Matters Now It's easy to turn personal finance into a scoreboard: lower expenses, higher savings rate, bigger income, faster FI date. But the real goal isn't winning the spreadsheet. It's building a life that feels secure, flexible, and worth living while you're still living it. This conversation is a reminder to use money as a tool, not a dare. From the Basement Joe Saul-Sehy gathers a rare Friday card table with Diana Merriam, Paulette Perhach, and Doc G to talk about saving too much, spending too much, working too hard, and finding the middle before the middle finds you. Doug is salty about not going to FinCon, the panel debates FIRE extremes, someone brings up homemade Gatorade, and the trivia question involves hockey nets. No word yet on whether Mom has removed the throw pillows upstairs. Resources Mentioned MrStingy.com -- "Too Much of a Good Thing: Taking It Too Far" Diana Merriam -- EconoMe Conference; economeconference.com Diana Merriam -- Optimal Finance Daily Paulette Perhach -- pauletteperhach.com Paulette Perhach -- New York Times personal finance writing, including ADHD and money Doc G / Jordan Grumet -- Earn and Invest podcast Doc G -- Wealth with Purpose The Fioneers -- referenced in the lifestyle design conversation Frugalwoods -- referenced during the throw-pillow/minimalism discussion Stacking Benjamins Newsletter, The 201 -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 Stacking Benjamins Community, The Basement -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].
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