The Thing We Never Talk About

Getting Your Financial House In Order

15 min · 11. mai 2026
episode Getting Your Financial House In Order cover

Beskrivelse

Most people's financial lives are spread across a patchwork of accounts, loans, insurance policies, and retirement funds — some forgotten, some incomplete, some never quite dealt with. Getting your financial house in order means bringing all of it together in one place so you can finally see the whole picture. Tim walks through the process he uses at the start of every financial planning engagement: gathering all of your important financial information, reviewing it to make sure the details are accurate and complete, and then evaluating how the pieces fit together using a series of financial scores that show where things stand right now. Because before you start making plans for the future, you need a clear, honest baseline for where you are today. One Key Takeaway: You can't make a plan for where you're going if you don't know where you are right now. Links: Send me a question to be answered on a future episode. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/podcast] Sign up for the Keep It Easy newsletter. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/newsletter]

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Alle episoder

64 Episoder

episode When Your Bank Account Stops Making Sense cover

When Your Bank Account Stops Making Sense

Most people with unconventional careers started out with a simple financial dashboard: one look at the bank account told them everything they needed to know. But over time, as careers grow and income gets real in a new way, that single number stops telling the whole story. Tim walks through what happens when the bank account stops making sense: why leaving too much money sitting in cash trades short-term security for long-term growth, and how to think about matching your money to its actual purpose, whether that's immediate spending, a stability cushion, or longer-term investments in stocks and bonds. It's a practical framework for the moment when you've stopped just surviving and started building something real. One Key Takeaway: When your bank account stops making sense, that's not a problem — it's a signal. It means your financial life has grown beyond what a single number can capture, and it's time to start thinking differently. Links: Send me a question to be answered on a future episode. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/podcast] Sign up for the Keep It Easy newsletter. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/newsletter]

8. juni 20269 min
episode Mary Lattimore — Musician cover

Mary Lattimore — Musician

In this episode, Tim sits down with Mary Lattimore — classically trained harpist, solo recording artist, and film composer — for a candid conversation about building an unconventional life in music. Mary traces her path from growing up around the harp in Asheville, through years of juggling multiple part-time jobs in Philadelphia, to the Pew Fellowship that gave her the financial breathing room to focus on music full time. She talks openly about her complicated relationship with money: the anxiety that came with her first large sum, the difficulty of saving when income ebbs and flows, and the game-changing decision to hire a business manager who helped her get her finances under control. Mary also shares the story of co-purchasing an apartment in a tiny village in Tuscany, what it felt like to sign those papers, and why owning a little piece of the world somewhere beautiful felt like a dream she barely knew she was allowed to have. Mary's question for Tim: What's your advice for someone whose money ebbs and flows and who is bad about saving? Key Takeaways: 1. Mary describes herself as both a freelance musician and a small business owner — that distinction matters, since thinking of her work as a business has shaped how she manages income, taxes, and team-building. 2. The Pew Fellowship she received in 2014 was the turning point that allowed her to stop working multiple part-time jobs and focus on music full time, though she recalls that seeing her bank account full for the first time actually triggered anxiety rather than relief. 3. Her path out of classical music into her own solo work was gradual and social — friends in Philadelphia asking her to add harp to their records, followed by touring with Thurston Moore, whose mastery of free improvisation pushed her to trust her own musical instincts. 4. Mary co-purchased an apartment in a village of 200 people in Tuscany — splitting the cost and the schedule with a friend — and describes it as a dream she barely believed was possible, especially given that homeownership in the U.S. feels out of reach. 5. Her business manager helped her set up LLCs for both her business and her Tuscany apartment, put her on a regular payroll through her S corp, and helped her make sense of the complex label statements she had previously found overwhelming. Links: Send me a question to be answered on a future episode. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/podcast] Sign up for the Keep It Easy newsletter. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/newsletter] Mary's website [https://marylattimore.net/] Mary's IG [https://www.instagram.com/maryoverthere/]

1. juni 202646 min
episode What Money Can’t Buy You cover

What Money Can’t Buy You

You know what they say about money & happiness — but we all still want to try a little bit, right? In this solo episode, Tim shares a personal story from his touring career: the year he made the most money he'd ever made as an audio engineer, stayed in nice hotels, and ended up feeling ... deeply unhappy. What was missing was human connection, the sense of being part of a team, the feeling that the work actually mattered — and money is a poor substitute. That realization didn't just change how Tim thought about money; it directly led to the career he has now, built around helping people with unconventional careers use their money to support the lives they actually want to live. One Key Takeaway: More money is swell, but it's not really the goal. The goal is a fulfilling life, and money is just one tool for building it. Links: Send me a question to be answered on a future episode. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/podcast] Sign up for the Keep It Easy newsletter. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/newsletter]

25. mai 202613 min
episode Cheetie Kumar - Chef & Owner (Ajja & Big Cat) cover

Cheetie Kumar - Chef & Owner (Ajja & Big Cat)

In this episode, Tim sits down with Cheetie Kumar — chef, owner of Ajja and Big Cat in Raleigh, NC, and two-time James Beard Award nominee — for a wide-ranging conversation about what it looks like to build a life and a business from scratch with more passion than experience. Cheetie traces her path from immigrating to the US as a child, through punk rock and bartending, to opening a music venue and eventually a restaurant with no formal training. She speaks candidly about the financial blind spots that nearly derailed her early restaurant — underpricing her menu, not understanding cost of goods, and spending years without a real grasp of finances. She also reflects on the emotional weight of growing up with financial insecurity and how that shaped her relationship with money through the present day. Throughout the conversation, Cheetie brings the same thoughtful, collaborative ethos she applies in the kitchen to questions about entrepreneurship, financial literacy, and what it means to build something that reflects your values. Cheetie's question for Tim: What are five essential financial literacy elements for a first-time small business owner? Key Takeaways: 1. Cheetie describes herself first as someone who fixes problems: the reality of running multiple restaurants is that the job is mostly about solving whatever is in front of you. 2. Her path to being a chef was indirect: she was bartending to support her touring life when a lease on a real restaurant space presented the opportunity to start her own restaurant, and she learned how to do that entirely on the job. 3. The DIY ethos of punk rock deeply shaped how she approached opening her first venue and restaurant — not waiting for permission or credentials, but simply identifying what was missing and building it herself. 4. Cheetie shares how not taking on outside investors meant keeping full ownership so that no one else had a claim on what she built, even when that made things harder in the short term. 5. She now approaches finances with diligence and rigor — tracking expenses, reconciling regularly, and understanding that there is no substitute for staying on top of the numbers, because looking away even briefly can put you in the red. Links: Send me a question to be answered on a future episode. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/podcast] Sign up for the Keep It Easy newsletter. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/newsletter] Cheeti's IG account [https://www.instagram.com/cheetieku/] Ajja [https://www.ajjaeats.com/] Big Cat on Brookside [https://www.bigcatbrookside.com/]

18. mai 202652 min
episode Getting Your Financial House In Order cover

Getting Your Financial House In Order

Most people's financial lives are spread across a patchwork of accounts, loans, insurance policies, and retirement funds — some forgotten, some incomplete, some never quite dealt with. Getting your financial house in order means bringing all of it together in one place so you can finally see the whole picture. Tim walks through the process he uses at the start of every financial planning engagement: gathering all of your important financial information, reviewing it to make sure the details are accurate and complete, and then evaluating how the pieces fit together using a series of financial scores that show where things stand right now. Because before you start making plans for the future, you need a clear, honest baseline for where you are today. One Key Takeaway: You can't make a plan for where you're going if you don't know where you are right now. Links: Send me a question to be answered on a future episode. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/podcast] Sign up for the Keep It Easy newsletter. [https://www.iselerfinancial.com/newsletter]

11. mai 202615 min