DOCTOR w/ $335,000 in SCHOOL LOAN DEBT

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
  • If you haven't seen my previous video talking about the different loan repayment programs, check it out here: • $321,000 in MED SCHOOL...
    I will also make a video play list for when I start paying back school loans aggressively so you can follow my journey! Right now I am just taking advantage of the 50% the government is willing to subsidize of my interest. When that stops at graduation, I will take everything in my saving and pay down a lump sum towards my student loans. My goal is to have at least 40-50K saved up by that time.
    Follow me on instagram @dr.jennale for more behind the scenes!
    If you missed out on any of the other Doctor Mom VLOGS
    LINK to playlist: www.youtube.co....
    Have you seen my previous videos :
    Dermatologist Recommended OTC products : • Dermatologist Recommen...
    How I Studied in Med School : • Mom in Medicine | How ...
    Tips for OBGYN Rotation : • TIPS for OBGYN rotatio...
    24 hour OB call : • 24 hrs as a Doctor wit...
    Breastfeeding struggles + DIY baby food : • Easy DIY Baby Food | 6...
    Sleep through the night | 6 months : • Baby Sleeping Through ...
    24 hrs as a Doctor with a Baby | OBGYN Rotation : • 24 hrs as a Doctor wit...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @bygnahzdivad
    @bygnahzdivad 6 років тому +125

    Hi Jenny, I don't know how the student loan interest rate work in the US, but the 6% interest rate is insane; it's more than the interest rate on a mortgage in Canada. But, then again, to get a mortgage here, you'd need to put a >5% down payment and prove that you have income to back up your mortgage (i.e. home mortgages are less risky than student loans, which might explain why the interest rate is so high on your student loans). So, maybe you can ask to get your loan re-structured (i.e. negotiate for a lower interest rate) in light of your recent employment status?
    I work in the finance sector, so there are few things I think you should also look into. For instance, when you say the government will pay 50% of the total accrued interest, is that a form of interest forgiveness? And how do they define the total accrued interest (i.e. is it total interest accrued over anytime period within the 3 years?)? In addition, given the way that you have described how the interest is defined, I have a feeling that your interests will also accrue interest year over year. In that instance, I strongly recommend you AVOID NOT paying interest at all and just pay everything in a lump sum, because I think there is definitely an optimal amount of interest that you can pay every year that would minimize the amount of money that you end up paying while also taking advantage of the interest forgiveness program that's implemented by the government.
    Hope that helps, :D.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +4

      The government pays for 50% of the remaining interest every year. I guess my logic is that I will never be able to pay the full interest of 20k of interest annually. If I pay say 10k the government will give me 5k. So is is better pay nothing to let the government pay 10k? Save the 10k and pay the lump sum at the end?

    • @bygnahzdivad
      @bygnahzdivad 6 років тому +14

      Hi Jenny, so I ran through the calculations and you were right, it is better to pay everything off as a lump sum at the end, because you can maximize the amount of government interest forgiveness for every year. I've pasted my excel calculation below if you're interested,
      Loan 335,000
      Interest 6.00%
      No Annual Payments
      End of Year Payment Accrued Interest Government Forgiveness Interest Payment
      0 - - - -
      1 - 20,100 10,050 10,050
      2 - 20,703 10,352 10,352
      3 - 20,721 10,361 10,361
      Total Amount Paid 30,762
      Some Annual Payments
      End of Year Payment Accrued Interest Government Forgiveness Interest Payment
      0 - - - -
      1 1,000 19,100 9,550 9,550
      2 2,000 18,673 9,337 9,337
      3 3,000 17,660 8,830 8,830
      Total Amount Paid 33,717
      So, if you know how much you're going to be paying at the end of the 3 years in interest payments, have you thought about investing in financial instruments (so that they can grow into the amount liability that you want to payoff)? For example, if you need to pay $30 762 at the end of 3 years, if you invest a portion of your yearly salary in let's say a passive ETF with 4% annual return, then,
      ETF Return 4.00%
      End of Year Annual Investment
      0 9,855
      1 9,855
      2 9,855
      3 -
      Total Invested 29,564
      Total Savings on Investment 1,198
      ETFs are assets that tracks the value of an index (which is generally a diversified portfolio of assets, i.e. low risk). If you get a passive ETF, then, their risk is even lower compared to active ETFs, i.e. you can probably achieve the annual return based on historical data. ETFs are pretty much the same as mutual funds, but, they're not actively managed (which is a major cost in mutual funds), i.e. the overall cost of investment is quite low (~$100 for the 3 years, assuming you just put in money at the 'start' of each year (and doing it once/year)).
      But, if you don't want to go through the hassle of doing research on investments, that's fine too and you can just put your money in the bank and save it.
      Hope that helps, :D.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +3

      Thank you so much!! I’m nervous about investing even though I know I should.

    • @bygnahzdivad
      @bygnahzdivad 6 років тому +6

      I think it's totally normal to feel nervous about investing! I mean I'd feel nervous if you gave me a medical textbook and told me to start diagnosing a patient with it! And to be honest, given your schedule as a resident and a parent, I don't think you should stress too much about investments, mainly because it's very difficult to juggle so many major tasks at the same time. But, if you're interested in learning more about financial instruments and the financial markets, I'd strongly recommend the introductory financial videos that MIT has put on UA-cam. I've pasted the link below for the first lecture by Dr. Lo; he's very good at explaining the concepts.
      ua-cam.com/video/HdHlfiOAJyE/v-deo.html

    • @bygnahzdivad
      @bygnahzdivad 6 років тому +4

      That is incredibly disheartening to hear!! I guess now I feel even more fortunate that I'm Canadian and live in Ontario, because our post-secondary education system is heavily subsidized by the government (at the provincial and at the federal level). Even without the government subsidies, I think the tuition in major Canadian institutions is still comparably lower than that of the US counterparts. For instance, my tuition at U of T (University of Toronto) was 8.5k/year and for international students, the tuition was 25-30k/year. Furthermore, the cost of living in Toronto is high by Canadian standards, but, if you compare it to that of NYC and Boston, it's actually very manageable. So, I think that's why there's an increase in the number US students that are enrolling in Canadian educational institutions.

  • @RangerRickTV
    @RangerRickTV 6 років тому +636

    Debt like this should be illegal.

    • @kevinday1697
      @kevinday1697 6 років тому +30

      So should getting people dependent on long-term pills that cause other health problems, but I guess someone's gotta do it.

    • @PInk77W1
      @PInk77W1 6 років тому +3

      Many things are illegal. People do them anyways

    • @curiousgeorge6921
      @curiousgeorge6921 6 років тому +2

      @@kevinday1697 hahah on point 100%

    • @RogueAizenYubel
      @RogueAizenYubel 6 років тому +1

      Explore with Rick I disagree it takes a lot money to run a college and professional school.

    • @blacklyfe5543
      @blacklyfe5543 6 років тому +1

      Explore with Rick no it shouldn't

  • @citygurl0105
    @citygurl0105 6 років тому +83

    Maybe pay it off in 7 years. Live a little but pay it off intensely. It doesn't have to be all or nothing. Yes, life is short but taking a calculated risk is feasible. too.

  • @savannahrobb986
    @savannahrobb986 6 років тому +32

    I’m actually putting off my RN till we have the cash saved to pay for the whole thing. It’s like 10k but I never want to get into debt again. I’m lucky because my husband has a great job and I can be a full time SAHM right now but my dream is to get my RN.

    • @icefishing804
      @icefishing804 6 років тому +6

      Savannah Robb yeah but you are losing the salary money every year you wait, so you are losing money

    • @morganjcase
      @morganjcase 6 років тому +4

      Ice Fishing I completely agree. When I finished my RN degree, my salary increased more than enough to pay off my student loans in 1 year.
      That being said, there are also SO MANY options besides loans to pay for college. Especially in healthcare fields. My senior year of high school I received a grant type thing that paid for me to get CNA training. I used that training to get a decent job at a hospital. I was able to work a minimum of 20 hours a week throughout nursing school, which helped a ton financially. That same hospital job also paid a certain amount each year towards my RN schooling. I saved soooooo much money in student loans, all while making a livable income, and gaining amazing experience through nursing school. 👍

    • @icefishing804
      @icefishing804 6 років тому +1

      Yeah I worked as a cna and got 20k towards school the my employer

    • @icefishing804
      @icefishing804 6 років тому

      From my

    • @tedb2776
      @tedb2776 6 років тому

      Savannah Robb i'd suggest you get into trading stocks/forex and thank me later. I'm glad i dropped out of NYU. I make 12k a month. Couldn't be happier.

  • @SameerUnt
    @SameerUnt 6 років тому +51

    Making 13000$ monthly, ate fast food worth of 800$ and still broke ? Claps!!

    • @andrewsins3707
      @andrewsins3707 6 років тому +1

      That's pathetic lol

    • @mph5896
      @mph5896 5 років тому +2

      Food budget, not all eating out. Family of 3. You could cut that down, but thats not a crazy number for 2 people working like crazy.
      $13k, she said that was a really high number due to her husband collecting a high commission for the month. Take out 35-40% for taxes on top of that.

    • @xyzxyz4575
      @xyzxyz4575 5 років тому

      eating mcdonalds big mac meal everyday!

    • @SK-mr6ov
      @SK-mr6ov 5 років тому

      Wouldn’t say broke when you have a huge salary coming in the future, lmao

    • @lupeavalos9791
      @lupeavalos9791 4 роки тому

      Sameer Siddiqui to be honest you must be stupid to go to school in the states waste so much money on that. If you went to Mexico, Spain, Ukraine, egypt , or middle east country or italy you wasted for 10 or 7 years as a physician to 50,000 to 60,000 usd to became a doctor .

  • @msniapie
    @msniapie 6 років тому

    The baby is the best part of this video. He’s adorable.

  • @habib080
    @habib080 6 років тому

    I’m starting medical school in August and I just accepted federal unsubsidized and fed direct loans to pay for the tuition/expenses. This is so scary. I just hope it pays off

  • @sonnyyD
    @sonnyyD 6 років тому +1

    i try my best every day not to freak out about my loans lol. i'm about to come out of dental school with 400k in debt. the debt we have is crippling to our lifetime earning potential so it's crucial imo to kill it asap. i think the key concepts are minimizing taxable income and liabilities (duh), but also maximizing your assets. we've been taught all our lives that hard-work is all you need to make it. clearly not. working for every dollar isn't going to cut it, neither will that weak interest in your savings account.
    since you're going to be generating a bigger income than most, and since it seems your lifestyle isn't going to be more costly than most, you'll have more money to play with and can afford to make slightly riskier investments with bigger returns. if you invest smart, you'll lose some (that you can afford to lose) but you'll win more. i'm not talking about get-rich-overnight type of investments here.. instead of buying a home for your family, you could perhaps buy a house(s) in a developing town where their value increase more quickly. i'm sure you or a good friend can build a smart investment portfolio, or just ride the coattails of smart investors. wouldn't it be such a good feeling to have a portfolio that covers all your interest? that's my first financial milestone out of school.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому

      Yes!! This is exactly what I’m talking about!

  • @peaches10011
    @peaches10011 6 років тому

    I love how you're so transparent and honest! new subscriber

  • @beachbum4166
    @beachbum4166 6 років тому

    Hang in there and don't become overwhelmed. My wife and I are doctors and I graduated residency 4 years ago and I finally got my student loan under 300K. I pay $3700 per month on my loan. My mortgage is only $2500 per month. I had my loan in forbearance until 3 years ago. Don't worry about too much yet, you will be able to pay big chunks later on. This month I threw down about 12K. Take Dave Ramsey with a grain on salt; enjoy your life.

  • @matthewmitchell68
    @matthewmitchell68 6 років тому

    I agree, most of Gordon Ramsey talks is easily already understood. One thing he doesn't do well is when you need to borrow money to pay tuition and you have to borrow a lot of money to go to Grad school or Medical School

  • @Esteban_MoneyAndFriendsDontMix
    @Esteban_MoneyAndFriendsDontMix 6 років тому +504

    You're so calm when throwing out those figures... I wish schools would come down on the cost...that's a mortgage. This is an edit to the above. Well...now we have NYU...tuition free...let's see if others follow.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +45

      Schools are horrible!

    • @mariae7455
      @mariae7455 6 років тому +18

      Especially if you compare the price to other countries

    • @KIM-kp9tq
      @KIM-kp9tq 6 років тому +13

      In England med school is 9000 a year and they have to do 5 years before being fully qualified. And people are constantly protesting and lobbying to make it free again like it was just a few years ago in England

    • @Esteban_MoneyAndFriendsDontMix
      @Esteban_MoneyAndFriendsDontMix 6 років тому +29

      That's a bargain compared to over here in the U.S.

    • @Andreas4696
      @Andreas4696 6 років тому +16

      Well, she's a doctor. A liberal arts major wouldn't be as calm when throwing out 6-digit loans figures.

  • @ViolinMD
    @ViolinMD 6 років тому +246

    Great video Jenny! It’s fun to see you on internal medicine ☺️ and thank you for being so open about loans and finances... it’s really not talked about very much, even though it’s on everyone’s mind as a resident! P.s Wyatt is growing so fast, what a cutie! 👶

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +16

      I was just thinking about you when I was editing this video. Do you have medical school debt in Canada ?!

    • @ViolinMD
      @ViolinMD 6 років тому +10

      Jenny Le - yeah we do... it depends how much schooling someone did before Med school (masters or PhD debt on top of it), but that’s definitely more debt than we have finishing medical school. Sounds really stressful, but it seems like you are handling it really well!

    • @chelliesaves425
      @chelliesaves425 6 років тому +1

      Love both of y'alls channels!! I too am in medicine and partake in loan forgiveness program. Thanks for your insight on loan debt. It's a scary topic and Dave Ramsay's "baby steps" can be an intense process. I think as long as you budget out your income/expenses you'll be fine and i totally agree with living your life even when you have this amount of debt. You do you! Thanks for sharing your journey publicly!

    • @DoubleMxo
      @DoubleMxo 6 років тому +1

      Violin MD can you please do a video on Canadian med school debt. If osap or federal funding helps

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому +1

      Jenny Le it is not 331k. its more thsn that. u forgot to add the opperrtunity cost. the lost income u gave up to go to school full time. lets say instead of going to school right after high school u went to work instead. in that 8 years u worked full time making 40k/year.
      8×40/year=320,000. 331k+320k=650k is the true lose to become a doctor.

  • @luomanfei
    @luomanfei 6 років тому +293

    I know being a doctor and a new mom is very stressful, but you are always so calm. Jenny, can you make a video on how to maintain mental and physical health during stressful times?

    • @Martianhunter09
      @Martianhunter09 6 років тому +1

      that was answered in the video. He does real estate

    • @SBdunks3
      @SBdunks3 6 років тому

      Where there’s a will there’s a way

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +1

      This was Stan salary working from home.

    • @rachael4408
      @rachael4408 6 років тому +6

      @Psyborg 0009 How people raise their kids is none of your business, so long as no child abuse or illegal activity is involved.

    • @juanitaflorescabrera537
      @juanitaflorescabrera537 4 роки тому

      Yes please 😢🙏, I'm loosing my mind I owe 20k 😰

  • @Armyguywizerdo16
    @Armyguywizerdo16 6 років тому +135

    I totally understand that you want to travel and live your life. But, you have to realize that once you become an attending, your salary will drastically increase. If you live like a college student you could pay off your student loans in less than 2 years. If you don't focus on paying them off as soon as possible and you start taking on more loans (house, car loans), your debt will take a long time to pay back. By then your little boy will be grown up and you will have to pay for his college. You have to live like a broke doctor for now, so you can live like a doctor later one. You can't keep living with the mentality that you will be hit by a bus tommorow.

    • @TheCrusaders13
      @TheCrusaders13 6 років тому +3

      Jainil Patel I don’t think hats what she means. I think she means is that she won’t be working nonstop and barely doing anything just to pay off the loans. She’s most likely giving herself extra time to pay them off. I’m the same way. Extra time is better than giving yourself a nonexistent goal.

    • @Armyguywizerdo16
      @Armyguywizerdo16 6 років тому +14

      Everything that I have said are not my words but Dave Ramsey's words. He is a financial guru and respected by a lot of people. He says that before you can start taking vacations and other debt like a house or a car you need to pay off your student loan debt. It's best for her to just down her head for 2 years and work (once she is earning an attending salary). If she takes this short route, then she has the rest of her life to spend her salary the way she wants. A lot of docs spend 10 years paying off their loans and are in constant strees for that amount of time, where she could have just lived minimaly for 1 - 2 years to pay off their loans.

    • @ryanturner8577
      @ryanturner8577 6 років тому +10

      Extra time equals higher loan payments. Loans have interest. The longer the wait, the more money you literally set on fire. I came out with 25k and paid 5k in interest in 4 years before I paid them all off. Her interest rate is 6%. The Government pays half for 3 years so she is throwing away $9,700 for 3 years and then $19,400 a year extra on top of the 335k. Now ofcourse it will go down as she pays it down, but the longer the wait to pay, the more money you're pissing away. The faster the better. That is and always will be true.

    • @Lxsgrl
      @Lxsgrl 6 років тому

      @@ryanturner8577 well said...

    • @SK-mr6ov
      @SK-mr6ov 5 років тому

      When you making the same amount as your student loans it’s pretty easy to pay it off with 3-5 years and live comfortably. Her lifestyle seems fine to me

  • @sarafofara
    @sarafofara 6 років тому +158

    I feel like with student loans I didn't really understand what it would feel like living with them until I was out of school. I think we're asked to make a super huge financial commitment when a lot of us are waaay too young to be making that big of a decision. 20k of debt or 100k or 200k...when you're 18 and about to start college that all sounds like make believe and it sounds like something you could easily pay off. Then you graduate and start working and realize how little money you have left over towards the loan. And living with that loan is HELL. And the interest just keeps stacking up so fast. The reality of living with a loan is hard to conceptualize when you're in school for a lot of people until you're actually living it. If I could go back in time and give myself advice I'd say: go to community college first two years, STAY IN STATE, and try to graduate as soon as possible. May not work for everyone but just what I would do different for myself :)

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +16

      I think if I went back to school, I would do the same. Go to a state school before med school. It doesn’t decrease your chances in the slightest.

    • @Randomwwww
      @Randomwwww 6 років тому

      Agree

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому +3

      Thats assuming u majored in something that makes money. Second things just becaue u majored in something doesnt mean u will a get a job in the field u studied. UA-cam Peter Schiff College. For the most part college has become a huge scam.

    • @kingvolt8694
      @kingvolt8694 6 років тому +1

      Im staying in state but going to a private university. Most of the state schools in Florida have extremely large classes and im not use to that at all.

    • @mariav.3227
      @mariav.3227 6 років тому +1

      oh man im 18 starting college next week ill be 100k in debt when i graduate i dont even have a car for a job do you have any other advice because i want to cry lol

  • @ismaeljrp1
    @ismaeljrp1 6 років тому +152

    Honestly you should pay as fast as possible. That 330k will balloon really fast, if you're not aggressively paying it off and only using the default payment plans.
    Ramsey does exaggerate a tad but his guidance is very sound. Your plan is actually really bad, the numbers don't make sense.
    Ramsey's point is, your life isn't 3-5 years... it's possibly 60 years longer. So aggressively paying off your debt and having a tight budget in the short term will allow you to live a lot better for the other 55 yrs of your life... lol
    I don't get when people say, "I wanna have fun with my life, not just pay bills", well that's the whole point of paying your debts off fast!, what if you or your husband have difficulties later in life and separate... what if you suffer from a tragic disability... or a child that requires very expensive medical care due to an illness?... That's the point of getting out of debt fast. You're gambling with your future at this point.

    • @sharonbrown8204
      @sharonbrown8204 6 років тому +7

      Very good advice Ismael. I hope she understands what you are saying. Life is unpredictable. Avoid a student loan if you can or take the least amount of loan possible and most importantly, repay it quickly.

    • @rachael4408
      @rachael4408 6 років тому +3

      Dave Ramsey saying put your nose down and WORK is basically the best advice you can get because work is how you make MONEY and MONEY is what you need to pay off DEBT. There aren't shortcuts in life. Sigh. She needs to pay off NOW so she can have lots and lots of debt free fun in the future, 3 years ain't that long anyway!!!!

    • @mat2941
      @mat2941 6 років тому +1

      Ismael Rivera so true.. i have the same tactics when it comes to pay off debt.. the sooner the better

    • @SK-mr6ov
      @SK-mr6ov 5 років тому

      She will be making a lot more when she comes out of residency so it will be easy to pay that off while living a comfortable and somewhat lavish lifestyle

    • @JazzymineA
      @JazzymineA 4 роки тому

      Ismael Rivera very well said

  • @jjjgh11
    @jjjgh11 6 років тому +45

    Hey Jenny, first i'd like to say your "slice of life in medicine" style videos are awesome! Idk the specifics of your family's income situation, but I'd say IBR is probably the best choice while you're in residency. After that though, with you easily bringing in north of 150K, I would say that your best bet would be aggressively paying down that debt in a relatively short period of time instead of having set payments for decades to grapple with (especially with the uncertainty of government programs). I know real estate isn't always completely stable, but if Stan makes around what you said in the video normally I would think you guys could live completely off his income on a moderate budget. That would allow you to throw all your post-tax income towards the debt and be done in 3-4 years. Depends on what your what you're willing to live with/without for X amount of time. I agree that especially for physicians who will have a large salary for basically the rest of their lives and already live with a lot of daily stress, going full-on "Beans and rice" isn't necessary. But I do think it's important to live as moderately as you can while still being comfortable to get rid of that debt so you can move on with your life and fully enjoy the fruits of your labor.

  • @bubbles02010
    @bubbles02010 6 років тому +52

    man.. i hope this youtube money is helping out at least a little bit

    • @indiaxlovee
      @indiaxlovee 6 років тому +1

      wingedeyelinerisoverrated amen

    • @dstarkspp
      @dstarkspp 6 років тому +1

      sorry only naked woman UA-cam make any money!

    • @ballbeenlife5930
      @ballbeenlife5930 6 років тому +1

      wingedeyelinerisoverrated her job is helping out a lot. That’s why student loans are so much in these fields because there’s high risk with a higher reward.

  • @hipnhappenin
    @hipnhappenin 6 років тому +22

    I have $200,000 in debt....

    • @everlastingprosperity5137
      @everlastingprosperity5137 5 років тому +1

      hipnhappenin nobody told you to go into debt hipnhoe

    • @SK-mr6ov
      @SK-mr6ov 5 років тому

      EverlastingProsperity it’s really not more like an investment if you pick the right career

    • @mohammadwasilliterate8037
      @mohammadwasilliterate8037 4 роки тому

      No it's a loan you requested to help you get a high paying job.

    • @mohammedsadiq7264
      @mohammedsadiq7264 4 роки тому

      No its not, you signed up for it. YOu werent young college vulnerable kid. you go to meed school as a full fledged adult

  • @WhiteCoatChronicles
    @WhiteCoatChronicles 6 років тому +65

    Thank you for the valuable info!

  • @trzippo1645
    @trzippo1645 6 років тому +175

    As a french , I find that absolutely unbelievable how much it costs to study in the unites states ! How are you gonna pay back 320k in 5 years ? Thats impossible if you dont make more than that . I feel sorry for you because being a doctor is hard enough its crazy that you have to pay that much to become one

    • @blancae1227
      @blancae1227 6 років тому +43

      Trzippo 16 so true! Is crazy! But yet you have football players, basketball players and baseball players making millions 🤦🏼‍♀️ this is crazy

    • @dsar8262
      @dsar8262 6 років тому +2

      Are you stupid? Doctors make heaps of money, they can pay off the debt very easily, unless they waste the money completely.

    • @PaulTranPharmacist
      @PaulTranPharmacist 6 років тому +5

      Yeah my guess is she will pay it off in a year or less because of her physician salary and UA-cam business and whatever else shes up to. She will be highly motivated to do so, because that will create a viral video making her even more $$

    • @unicornhorse1632
      @unicornhorse1632 6 років тому

      Trzippo 16 I feel bad for French people. Do they earn $300-500.000 per year? I believe maximum is like $60.000. So don’t feel bad for us

    • @CaraMarie13
      @CaraMarie13 6 років тому +2

      As an American, i can tell you doctors here make a whole lot of money.

  • @Jake-tz6ye
    @Jake-tz6ye 6 років тому +23

    Prioritize paying off your debt in your first 5 years as an attending. Live as broke as possible in those 5 yrs

    • @twdjt6245
      @twdjt6245 6 років тому +10

      BROKE?! SHELL be making around 200k a year and her husb. makes 9k a month?! Unless they live in a large/expensive city or have some other variable I’m not aware of...they’re not even broke now! Not sure why she’s not paying off at least some.

    • @icefishing804
      @icefishing804 6 років тому

      Her payments will be 3500 a month, so it will take 7k a month for 6 years or 14 k a month for 3 years

  • @shalalala868
    @shalalala868 6 років тому +27

    I knocked out about $75K in 5.5 years. I still took vacations and lived my best life. I refuse to work SOLELY to pay bills and never invest in myself, experiences, etc. along the way. I did however, live in low key areas, had roommates, brought my lunch to work, etc. I think you need to squeeze in some exciting life experiences in there, just within reason and maybe once or twice a year. Perhaps you should figure out a way to make passive income...

  • @johnc8327
    @johnc8327 6 років тому +62

    9:30 has 300K worth of debt... spends $800 on dinner and goes on vacation... Why should someone else pay all your bills for however many years you were in med school for?

    • @alpinesubx
      @alpinesubx 6 років тому +14

      Because she's a doctor and on a whole other level then a blue collar worker like myself. Apparently living the extravagant lifestyle comes with the title of doctor. Even if someone else has to pay for it.I generally could care less about what people do with their money but when tax payer dollars are involved its a little more aggravating to hear shed rather go out and eat instead of saving that money to pay off school loans.

    • @Deelifull
      @Deelifull 6 років тому +8

      At what point in the video, did Jenny say "someone else" is paying her bills? ____?
      She just said that A) between her and her husband they're bringing around $13K a month ($9K for him & $4K for her) and B) she wants to pay this ($335K) off within the next 6 years.

    • @Abunchaponys
      @Abunchaponys 6 років тому +2

      Deelifull because she is pretty much crying about her debt. She wanted to get ahead in life by having a good job and making thousands a month. All these people who want free college don’t understand. Your going to get shitter doctors more unemployed doctors pay is going to go down. You go to college you picked your school. You knew how much it would cost and you knew roughly how much you would be making. You wanted to get ahead. It’s a short term pain for long term gain. It’s about taking a risk and then getting a nice outcome in the end.

    • @blacklyfe5543
      @blacklyfe5543 6 років тому

      John C exactly

    • @greg9662
      @greg9662 6 років тому +4

      Where do you think those student loan funds come from? Tax dollars from the American public, that's where. So rather than getting a job to pay for living expenses she used student loans. So, in essence, someone else was paying her bills and it was the American public.

  • @toddaustin2198
    @toddaustin2198 6 років тому +77

    Wait a minute! Somebody $335,000+ in student loan debt bashing my man Dave Ramsey while spending $800/month on eating out at restaurants? Somebody definitely needs more discipline to go along with more ramen noodles, rice and beans.
    Best of luck getting out of this mess though, Dr. Jenny. And TY for sharing your story. I hope you have a great medical career!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +20

      In my opinion, my health and the sanity of my family is much more important than saving a couple hundred dollars to pay my school loans. The people who eat ramen noodles, rice and beans will probably end up having hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease. In the long run, your medical health might cause you more.

    • @toddaustin2198
      @toddaustin2198 6 років тому +13

      Well, that's not how I feel. We took just 6 years to pay off my chiropractic college student loans while living below our means. We also paid off my wife's student loans for her theatre degree during those 6 years as well.
      We have no debt in our lives other than mortgage debt thanks to Dave Ramsey and his sane teachings.

    • @fer-curium1650
      @fer-curium1650 6 років тому +2

      todd austin what does your wife do? Sine she got a theater degree?

    • @toddaustin2198
      @toddaustin2198 6 років тому +4

      Great Q, Fer.
      She's a Licensed Massage Therapist. Back when she went to Massage Therapy School it was as simple as writing a $700 check to the school to pay tuition in full up front. No student loans necessary.
      Nowadays though, the LMT schooling requires student loans for most and costs ~ $20,000.

    • @fer-curium1650
      @fer-curium1650 6 років тому +2

      todd austin that’s insane. It doesn’t make sense when I’m sure the most of teaching material hasn’t changed.

  • @NeoTimbo
    @NeoTimbo 6 років тому +37

    I don’t think you’ve watched enough of Dave Ramsey to really understand his message. A doctor should be able to live on a third of their income comfortably. His point is that it’s stupid to have a reduced income for 10 years when you can easily get it done in 3 years, then once all of your debt is gone you can save for a house, buy a nicer car outright and invest. You will have so much more wealth and live a much happier life if you just rip the bandaid off instead of slowly ripping it off hair by hair. If you drive a $5000 car and rent a cheap house or apartment, stay out of consumer debt and don’t go to Starbucks every morning the debt will be gone so fast. I’m not hating, it just pains me to hear people speak so nonchalantly about $300000 of debt.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +7

      I have done a lot of research on this topic so I would disagree when you say I speak about the topic nonchalantly. Our cars are paid in full, our mortgage is cheaper than rent, and I drink free burnt coffee from the hospital. So Dave Ramsey isn’t telling or teaching me anything new or life changing. When I say there must be a smarter faster way of paying off these loans - something Dave Ramsey isn’t teaching is velocity banking.

    • @Samantha-yn8tv
      @Samantha-yn8tv 6 років тому +2

      A third of around $60,000 a year is comfortable?

  • @mallorycandace
    @mallorycandace 6 років тому +10

    I think I would just live on closer to an RN salary and use the extra to pay back the loan. (After you are done with residency) So let’s say nurses would make ~ 50k I’d live on that and use the rest of my salary on debt. You won’t make any headway unless you really put money on it.

  • @oomma5
    @oomma5 6 років тому +31

    As a physician myself, 2 years out of residency, you'll be fine. Tons of loans... Live your life and you'll have enough to pay back

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +13

      ❤️ thank you.

    • @wisdomandlove1661
      @wisdomandlove1661 6 років тому

      if after residency you can secure a job that pays $250k to $300,000 you can be debt free in 5 to 6 yrs. if you work that job and a per time gig on the side you can kill the debt in 3yrs.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +8

      You didn’t consider paying taxes. Just because a physician salary is 250k does not mean they are taking home 250k. In California, after taxes, you can be taking home closer to 50%.
      So if you consider the math 250/2 = 125 after taxes. Living off 60k a year gives you 65k to pay back to loans. 335/65 is still over 5 years without consider the interest the loan will be squaring .... and as I said in my video, paying off the loan in 5 years was my goal.

    • @wisdomandlove1661
      @wisdomandlove1661 6 років тому +1

      50% in taxes is very high and sad.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому

      Based on your first calculation 250k will be taxed zero.

  • @DiegoMejia86
    @DiegoMejia86 6 років тому +11

    I enjoyed this video until I heard you talk about paying back the debt.......I think that's the point of Dave Ramsey, there is no secret formula. Most people aren't willing to make the sacrifices to get out of debt quickly, which is completely fine but just accept that paying off the loans isn't as important as eating out, going out for drinks, buying a new car or whatever else you decide to spend your money on. You also aren't paying back that loans yet so you might have a change of heart once you start receiving the monthly statements, Best of luck with whatever you choose to do and congrats on finsihing.

  • @leadmetopeacejeanie
    @leadmetopeacejeanie 6 років тому +24

    I think your statement "I'm investing in myself" nailed it, Jenny. Of course there's a price to pay with anything great! Look at your accomplishments. You cannot put a price on knowledge, or education. You are providing a wonderful future for yourself and husband, and your son. You have an amazing future! You'll pay it back, yes, but it's worth it. I wonder if there's a way to incorporate your loan, or part of it into you home, or a home in the future somehow...there has to be a way. My kids figured out ways to reduce their student loans after graduation....I could find out for you..and they did get reduced! Anyhow, you have an amazing future, a great family, and you WILL be fine!! Love you!! Hugs, Jeanie xxooo PS I'll be praying!!

  • @ct2623
    @ct2623 6 років тому +41

    Hi Jennifer,
    I am in the process of possibly submitting a pre bill to my politicians about revision of student loan debt in high cost of living cities, NYC, LA, etc... will keep you posted.

    • @jeanp.5929
      @jeanp.5929 6 років тому +1

      CLOUT lol. how you know?

  • @andieszabo3360
    @andieszabo3360 6 років тому +11

    Hey Jenny, I know it sounds crazy, but Dave Ramsey's baby steps system really does work. I know it seems insurmountable with the massive numbers that you have in student loan debt, but it's about giving up some things now to have financial freedom in the future. You don't actually have to eat beans and rice if that's not your thing. There are all kind of UA-cam videos about inexpensive meal plans for families. It's about making sacrifices now for a bright future. Good luck.

    • @rustypudder7072
      @rustypudder7072 6 років тому

      Andie Szabo maybe the baby can drink water and eat dirt too right.

  • @kimberlyalvarez3039
    @kimberlyalvarez3039 6 років тому +31

    I only have 4k in undergrad so far and I graduate in 2 years....and 4k scares me...having your debt will give me anxiety attacks every day. But I wish you the best and I'm so happy your following your dreams!!

    • @monote14
      @monote14 6 років тому

      kimberly Alvarez same here. Is it 4k a quarter ?

    • @kimberlyalvarez3039
      @kimberlyalvarez3039 6 років тому

      christian stov its 4k in 2 years my freshman and sophmore year. This fall is my junior year.

    • @monote14
      @monote14 6 років тому +2

      kimberly Alvarez not bad at all. Wish it was the same for me lol

    • @kimberlyalvarez3039
      @kimberlyalvarez3039 6 років тому +1

      christian stov dont worry we will pay off the debt one day !!

    • @monote14
      @monote14 6 років тому

      kimberly Alvarez hope so lol. Are you just getting your ba or yoru masters as well?.

  • @kaiserflame1673
    @kaiserflame1673 6 років тому +182

    TLDR:
    She took out a loan to get an education, leading to a well paying job, promising that she'd pay the money back. However, after getting what she wanted out of the deal, she wants the debt to be forgiven, because she feels like it's a burden. So she'd rather shift the burden of the debt to the taxpayers, by having the debt forgiven by the government. Oh, and she bought a house while in debt $335,000. And she doesn't feel like taking a look at Dave Ramsey's content because she feels like she already knows all the financial advice he's suggesting. Clearly.

    • @randomvidsrock21
      @randomvidsrock21 6 років тому +12

      God bless you for this bro. looool

    • @kaiserflame1673
      @kaiserflame1673 6 років тому

      Geruuld Anytime ;)

    • @jortega61924
      @jortega61924 6 років тому +3

      Kaiserflame 1 she wasn't living like a student. 300,000 some odd dollars was for living off of. Smh.

    • @rachael4408
      @rachael4408 6 років тому +3

      Dave Ramsey saying put your nose down and WORK is basically the best advice you can get because work is how you make MONEY and MONEY is what you need to pay off DEBT. There aren't shortcuts in life. Sigh.

    • @88shalulu88
      @88shalulu88 6 років тому +3

      I was with her all the way up until this part too!! After taking FPU with my now husband, the only qualms I have with Dave Ramsey's plan is just $1000 for emergencies so we padded ours a little more. We started with $113k in debt in 2016 and will be debt free next year with 80k of it being student loans on 5.5% interest. She wants to pay her loans off in 5 years but wants to finance other stuff in the meantime. She basically said she is ok with living like a rich doctor now and taking the long way around. It's her life and her choice, but my heart broke trying to watch everything after that :--(

  • @fenchcheese222
    @fenchcheese222 6 років тому +45

    Jenny I love how transparent you are with everything! As a fourth yr med student it is great to get a glimpse of my future. Also just cutest family ever! Good luck with the end of intern yr!!!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +1

      Fourth year med school is the best year!! Congratulations of almost being done 💪🏼

  • @folumb
    @folumb 6 років тому +32

    I listen to Dave Ramsey too and I'm dismayed with his advice. You CAN'T make any serious money in medical school. The amount you'd have work would compromise your studying which defeats the whole purpose. MD/PhD programs are the only way I know of to go through med school for free (tough to know how many med students are on full tuition and more scholarships without being in physician scientist programs) or you can have rich parents. It's sad because you already have to work hard enough to be here. I could live at home, not own a car, have all my supplies donated and eat ramen noodle for 4 years, but I'd still need to borrow. And people wonder why our generation cares so much about work-life balance :(

    • @nkyryry
      @nkyryry 6 років тому +6

      folumb , you clearly don’t understand Dave Ramsey’s advice. Yes you could live like that and you’d still need to borrow. The part you’re missing is you have to live like that AFTER YOU BORROW. That’s how you pay it back. I’m sorry but you’re not going to finance medical school and graduate and live like a doctor. You’re going to have to live like a hermit crab. But nobody wants to put in that much work and not live a life that flaunts it. It’s hard for doctors to get out of medical school and live like they work at McDonald’s. It hurts their ego, it’s embarrassing. They NEED the nice car and big house. They have to look like they make $200K a year. Public perception destroys the smartest people in the world.

    • @darkmagician1710
      @darkmagician1710 6 років тому

      nkyryry I agree 100% but you also have to understand that many people that go into these fields do so to be able to say that they're doctors, lawyers, etc. so that they get a sense of pride from talking about what they do for a living. This is why these same types of people rush to get the house and cars but complain about their debt. Self awareness is key.

    • @dogslife4493
      @dogslife4493 6 років тому

      You clearly don't listen to his plan and what he follows then

  • @aliciamcknight5946
    @aliciamcknight5946 6 років тому +8

    I feel the same way you do. I owe student loans and am struggling to pay them back - but at the same time I don’t want to scrape along just to pay them off a couple years sooner. To each their own, but I just don’t think it’s worth it to live “scorched earth”.

  • @SavingsMinusDebt
    @SavingsMinusDebt 6 років тому +4

    Pay your student loan back. Do what ever it takes! It's only 5 years hard work for freedom for the rest of your life. If you do not you'll be a slave for the rest of your life. You don't want that.

  • @tqdinh2
    @tqdinh2 6 років тому +11

    Good God Almighty😱

  • @guillermozavala315
    @guillermozavala315 6 років тому +5

    You’re missing the point on the Dave Ramsey snowball effect it’s on the long term where his plan helps, why have a bill for 20 years when u can bring 5k instead towards the family

  • @vietnamemperor123461
    @vietnamemperor123461 6 років тому +11

    I've seen many more doctor with close to 3 quarter of a million dollars. $335,000 is not that bad. I just hope everybody understand that everything has a price to pay. For all those who think physicians will pay off their loan after a couple of years after medical school is absolutely not true. I known some doctors that still struggling paying off their loans at retirement . What's going on with the higher education system in America? Everyone please do what you truly have a passion for and don't just do it for the money or family pressure otherwise you will be miserably regret a life you have waste. Again I'm not discouraging anyone to become a doctor but please do it if its a calling from god.

    • @amymohanty1045
      @amymohanty1045 6 років тому

      vietnamemperor123461 so true...family pressure, status and to earn a lot of money (that is the impress) and universities to get students money and run a degree ...mature aged students who have done several degrees before in arts, business getting into medicine because healthcare is one of the few sectors that provides jobs...again not everyone getting the job they are looking for...

    • @vietnamemperor123461
      @vietnamemperor123461 6 років тому +1

      Amy Mohanty The sad thing people doesn't realize is that college is a business. They're there not to educated or invest the future generation but to make profit. How can a person considered to be success if they're so deeply in debt? Its an embarrassment! We live in society where people worship materialism. A luxurious house, fancy cars, stunning new clothes and people will treat you like poop on the street if you don't have a lot of money. Therefore people have to get deep into debt and buy things they can't afford to impress strangers they don't know or even like just to keep up with the Jones. This American Dream BS is a disgusting lie! Yeah I agree with you about not everyone will get they job they look sometimes even worse. Statistic shows about 70% of American hate their job and that's a red flag. I see this country keep going down in the toilet but I do have hope to see a light at the tunnel with the next generation.

    • @amymohanty1045
      @amymohanty1045 6 років тому

      vietnamemperor123461 so true...i hope we can learn the way people like you think...sacrificing health, happiness, family and coming down to not eating properly and most drs doing a lot of patch diagnosis where they are not given enough time to do a correct diagnosis and interventions...telling this from live experiences...and this way of thinking spreading to other countries including australia...we need to step back from this huzzbuzz and think for ourselves...good on you ...

    • @KiloByte69
      @KiloByte69 6 років тому +1

      +vietnamemperor123461 You forgot to mention that 90% of the world's workers hate their job. 70% is actually a good number in comparison. But hey, if you don't like living in the world's number one superpower then feel free to fuck off back to your shithole home country. So many foreigners love to hate America yet they refuse to leave!

    • @amymohanty1045
      @amymohanty1045 6 років тому

      KiloByte misunderstanding...dont get angry...read through what he has said and try to understand logically....rather starting to swear...

  • @luomanfei
    @luomanfei 6 років тому +9

    I am in the same boat regarding student loans. I am not going to be a doctor but I am in my last year of pharmacy school. I really want to live by Dave Ramsey’s advice but like you said, you never know if you will wake up tomorrow. Spending so much money and time on school and you feel like you should be able to live more comfortably than eating rice and beans. I think it is all about finding a balance between living frugal and still having fun.

    • @DELLRS2012
      @DELLRS2012 6 років тому

      I think it is easy in our society to view a frugal diet as oppressive and overly restrictive. However, rice and beans are not that bad. People have been living frugally for generations and have found fulfillment and happiness. You learn tricks of the trade as you go along. I think it is important to remember that when having these types of discussions.

    • @notsomuchhere1387
      @notsomuchhere1387 6 років тому

      I beleive this as well!

  • @will111466
    @will111466 4 роки тому +1

    I believe that if you work in the PEACE CORP for 5 years that the debt is forgiven and I also believe that if you join the military for some time they will also pay off the debt. Another option is to join a medical advisory board of some sort and just be paid for your knowledge and experience and instead of being paid letting them agree to paying off your student loans. It will take some due diligence on your part however it's worth checking out! An even greater option is to take some of that money that you are saving and put 10 % of it down on a multifamily apartment building with a 90% LTV preferably in an opportunity zone which will yield you a 30% to 35% tax credit in an opportunity zone and since it will be debt it will not be taxed but will be cashflow. YOU could use the difference between what is paid on the loan and what is left to pay off your student loan.You will also get tax benefits from this as well. You can never save enough to pay it off so you have to leverage your credit in a good way to take on good debt using real estate to pay off the bad debt. It's the most practical way to get out of this type of debt and become wealthier in the process!😊

  • @Muaythaifighter1000
    @Muaythaifighter1000 6 років тому +4

    Sorry Jenny, you can't beat the grind. The grind is watching.... Rice and beans it is!

  • @jenniferlarregui3315
    @jenniferlarregui3315 6 років тому +1

    What Dave Ramsey is trying to say about paying back loans is how you spend your money while paying it back. It is mostly directed to doctors and lawyers who have over $100,000 in student loans. Once doctors and lawyers start making the big bucks, they start to live the good life and spending their money to buy expensive cars and homes right away. He would prefer that if you are making, for example, over $100,000 salary a year that you live on about $50,000 and use the other $50,000 to pay back loans. If doctors and lawyers lived this way then they can pay off their debt within 5 years (maybe less) and then they can spend their money however they want and not be in debt. I would do it if I made that kind of money. It makes sense.

  • @WOG18
    @WOG18 6 років тому +5

    This has nothing to do with this video..... but PLEASE tell me where you got that necklace! I would love to find one! Due to working and going to school in the hospital we are not allowed to wear our diamond rings or anything with studs in them. SO I would like something that would let someone know that I am married :D

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому

      It’s from Tiffany’s!

  • @ssnadera6498
    @ssnadera6498 5 років тому +1

    So what i make around 40 k, student debt is 30 k, doctors debt is 330 k, makes close to 200 to 300 k, whats there to whine about,plus they wont have to worry about high mortgage payments cause theyll be easily sble to afford a huge down payment,dont u just hate it when people making above 100k whine about their financial troubles

  • @salaann9262
    @salaann9262 6 років тому +8

    Thank you for taking the time out of your busy life to make videos and allowing us to see a glimpse of your life! It takes alot, and you're going through so much. I wanted to make sure you know that your viewers are so thankful for you, for being you! You inspire me to be a better person. So I say again with love and respect, THANK YOU!!!!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +1

      TYSM! 😍 You all bring me so much happiness.

  • @nkyryry
    @nkyryry 6 років тому +1

    There’s not a better way. Put your head down and work your ass off is all there is. You dug yourself a huge hole and the only way getting out is to crawl your way out... But like you said you’re not willing to live the way you’d have to do there’s no point. You can NOT pay off over $300K in debt in 5 years and live the way you want in the process.

  • @TanyaMarquard
    @TanyaMarquard 6 років тому +4

    No point in stressing about student loans, one day when ur earning more ull manage to pay more and it will eventually be paid up. Thats how I view it and I also jst hang in there till I am in my real job

  • @thomasmorrison3279
    @thomasmorrison3279 6 років тому +1

    Why didn't you join the military and get free medical education? You should pay off your loan as soon as possible and not enjoy your life. You got yourself in this mess. Take Dave Ramsey's advice. You are swimming in accrued interest.

  • @DrAdnan
    @DrAdnan 6 років тому +5

    Thanks for always being so transparent! My med school debt is mind-boggling, and our school just has private loans, but I try not to think about it too much and just hope it’ll work out. :/ I agree with your thoughts on Dave Ramsey as well. A lot of his advice seems more geared towards people spending way out of their means or not working enough.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +1

      My cousin took out private loans for pharmacy school and so she doesn’t have an income based loan repayment program. I’m looking into velocity banking but don’t have enough information to teach others yet. Seems like a better option to pay back loans though!

    • @DrAdnan
      @DrAdnan 6 років тому

      Jenny Le I haven’t heard about velocity banking, I’ll have to look into it- thanks! Yeah, I wish we had loan forgiveness or other options.

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому

      Jenny Le what go into a public sector? or work in military they will pay your debt off for u.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +1

      I am currently working in public service. So these three years of residency count towards my 10 years of loan forgiveness .... but I can’t trust or depend on the government to influence such a huge part of my life. What if at the end of 10 years they’re like sorry! We’re not forgiving your loans ... then what? I’m stuck with over a million in debt because interest just continued to pile up while I made minimum payments

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому

      Jenny Le I undetstand.

  • @marieskawaiimommyvlog8816
    @marieskawaiimommyvlog8816 6 років тому +1

    The amount of debt you've had to take on is insane!! My philosophy on student loans is that If I die today, I'll die happy knowing that I lived my life fully - eating well and buying what I like (in moderation... not luxury goods but little indulgences here and there) and part of that is not having paid off a big chunk of my student loans. But maybe this isn't the right philosophy because when I look at my student balance I just want to cry 😢

  • @JazminRacquel
    @JazminRacquel 6 років тому +74

    I think Dave Ramsey's advice is more suited for people with large consumer debt, I didn't find it helpful in terms of how to manage student loan debt, I think in general our generation is pretty frugal because the economy has been bad for most of our adult lives, so his target audience is older people who have been living above their means for years

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +13

      That makes more sense.

    • @Djme2
      @Djme2 6 років тому +3

      basically the boomers and upper gen x

    • @RenaeFlowers
      @RenaeFlowers 6 років тому +7

      Nope. A lot of his audience in the past 10 years, are millennial with crippling student loan debt and house payments. If you check out his youtube channel, you'll see videos from people who paid off everything including the house before they turned 30. He's abrasive and blunt, but he tells you exactly what getting out of debt is like. It's difficult, but it's possible.

    • @addictcar69
      @addictcar69 6 років тому +2

      Naomi Flores: your absolutely right but this dr. Is just like the rest of the people that get them self in to debt and expect not to sacrifice for a couple of years in order to pay off the debt. Look she married that adds debt goes on vacation, have nice wedding ring and goes out to eat and drink. She's very entitled and wants loan forgiveness. Basically they want everything for free. She knows that medical school is very expensive. Ps have a child. Most people are going to be broke for the rest of there life's.

    • @denisereyes1509
      @denisereyes1509 6 років тому

      Couldn't of said it better myself

  • @timsmith2193
    @timsmith2193 6 років тому +1

    Dave Ramsey didn't sink in if you have $335,000 in debt and spend $800/month on eating out.

  • @ronaldhonda2276
    @ronaldhonda2276 6 років тому +3

    Jenny Le, don't come here complaining about being in debt. You chose to be a doctor, live with everything that comes with it, woman-up. It's your bed, you sleep in it.

  • @itsnicoletheNP
    @itsnicoletheNP 6 років тому +1

    Hey Jenny! Thanks for sharing about your student loan debt! I’m a NP and my husband is a physician. So we know the pain of crazy debt when coming out of several years of school and training while our peers and friends get out of undergrad sooner and already start making money, investing in retirement, etc! It’s nice to show people that medical providers aren’t rich billionaires! We’re actually poorer than the homeless person down the street due to our income debt ratio! :( You sound like you have a good head on your shoulders and I admire the budget you and your husband have. You should check out “The White Coat Investor” by James Dahl MD. The best financial advice specifically for physicians or medical providers from a EM physician in Utah. All of our physician friends live it. :) Best wishes in residency! Xoxo

  • @johnnyli9297
    @johnnyli9297 6 років тому +3

    Don't sweat it or just pay off the interest until you're done with the residency. After you're done, live like a resident for a couple years and use the extra cash to start paying off the debt. I did it that way, and it was done in 2 years. It's much easier, faster, and phychologically rewarding to pay it off with an attending income than 60k base salary with maybe another 40 to 60 K depending on how much extra call you would take as an upper level resident. I tried to pay it off as a resident, and it was really painful. Basically throwing $2,000 into the principle which didnt seem to budge month after month sucked! As a resident, that $2,000 can really crimp your lifestyle. As an attending, you can easily throw 10K into it per month and live comfortably. You will see the numbers go down and psychologically, it's just way easier when you actually see the numbers start to fall. Best of luck to you.

  • @maoyama
    @maoyama 6 років тому +2

    Dave Ramsey approach worked for me. I am an OD who paid off $205K loans in 38 months without eating rice and beans...With your salary, $335K is a piece of cake. Dave's info sounds obvious but most people can't/won't do it and that's what makes it hard... Everyone knows how to lose weight, eat less and work out but can everyone get skinny? That's the best example.

  • @Ivy-7788
    @Ivy-7788 6 років тому +3

    If you think you don't want to sacrifice two years of your life to pay off all your debt because you might die and not enjoy life, you might as well not have gone to medical school, gotten married, or had a baby because you might of died and not see your child grow up or died and not finished medical school" etc... Yet here you STILL are and you will continue with life after paying off your debts in two years. "Live like no one else, so you can live like no one else."

  • @jennydani6864
    @jennydani6864 6 років тому +1

    how much are you making as a first year?

  • @hrj1016
    @hrj1016 6 років тому +6

    I just accepted my first year of med school finaid loan award last week for $75K. I'm staring down the barrel of the exact same amount as you. It's overwhelming, but I don't have any other options to make this work. My plan for after residency is to live on $70K/yr, save $30K/yr, and pay loans with every penny beyond that til it's just gone.

    • @eugeneabreut5208
      @eugeneabreut5208 6 років тому +1

      Heather James u cant save if u have debt because what are u saving?? The money is not yours, you owe it to the government. Live off the 70k and put everything towards debt. U cant invest or save if u have debt. What are u saving money for if u have interest growing daily on your loans? Lol dont save, put everysingle penny towards debt. Dont worry about buying nice shit to impress people. AT THE END OF THE DAY U KNOW WHAT YOUR SALARY IS, YOU DONT HAVE TO INPRESS ANYONE. Good luck

    • @hrj1016
      @hrj1016 6 років тому

      Eugene Abreut I'm not out to impress anyone. I'm 35 yrs old w/o a retirement acct, and I'm only just now starting med school. You can save if you have debt. The interest will not be greater than $30K/yr. Even if I only make $200K/yr, I can have all debt paid off in a max of 4 yrs by throwing everything beyond $100K/yr at it.

    • @anmol3457
      @anmol3457 6 років тому

      Heather James you're missing the tax factor

    • @hrj1016
      @hrj1016 6 років тому

      Not missing it.

    • @DELLRS2012
      @DELLRS2012 6 років тому

      Why live off of 70K? Unless you are living in a major city 30K should be more than enough to live off of.

  • @ogmudboned
    @ogmudboned 6 років тому +1

    Just follow Dave Ramsey's baby steps.

  • @EvaSlash
    @EvaSlash 6 років тому +3

    If you think medical school is expensive, dental school is even more expensive!

  • @christopherstack176
    @christopherstack176 6 років тому +2

    I am a new attending. I really hope you check out white coat investor (book and blog). It is the best source for us. Dave Ramsey is good for 101 budgeting and financing, but WCI is our community that has great blogs and forums for help. I went to state school $200k debt and was able to almost pay it off with dual income household (wife NOT physician) after 5 years of training (3 of which she was working). Should be paid off after first couple paychecks as an attending.
    Let me know if you need any advice.

  • @eliasdavidreyes8611
    @eliasdavidreyes8611 6 років тому +42

    Hi this may sound like hate, but in my country there is nobody that gives you a loan, and if you want to study in a private school you have to take a year work, and get the money, there is no other way. but you guys can access to loans and they don't just pay you the school they give you money to live. So i think its fair that you pay them back, but sometimes the debt goes like crazy like your case. anyway you are really lucky to get that loan and you can pay it, and then make a lot of money and help people!!!

    • @autobotdiva9268
      @autobotdiva9268 6 років тому +2

      what country your from because we are the only country that has LOANS.But other countries can go to school and become a doctor as they are more respected there just like teachers. teachers are not respected much in america since 1980s

    • @kurfffa
      @kurfffa 6 років тому +5

      USA is not the only country with loans.

    • @autobotdiva9268
      @autobotdiva9268 6 років тому +1

      stomakow
      Thats why i asked what other country has " federal student loans" & what country are they from?? 😒

    • @Julie-yes
      @Julie-yes 6 років тому +1

      Autobot Diva I’m from El Salvador we don’t have student loans, federal grants or any kind of help. Most countries in central and South America don’t give out loans. In El Salvador we have low cost public universities that are hard to get in and private are no more than $150 usd a month , minimum wage is $210 usd do your math 😂😂😂😂 Is hard to get a Job as a student here not like in the US, and we use US dollars as currency.

    • @autobotdiva9268
      @autobotdiva9268 6 років тому

      Ana Alvarenga
      Yup that was my statement/question. No other country has federal student loans but USA

  • @Tigerlilly490
    @Tigerlilly490 6 років тому +2

    Considering debt consolidation is key. As well as finding loan forgiveness programs. Keep the faith you can do this!

  • @Eli-kq7qt
    @Eli-kq7qt 6 років тому +6

    You said it exactly right... people listen to someone like David Ramsey because they think he’s some kind of financial guru, when in reality as you said he’s really just giving common sense advice that people either already know or should know and fail to practice but bc he speaks with a southern accent and adds his own brand of southern hillbilly charm “ no offense to anyone “ then people think he’s thee oracle or something. You really hit the nail on the head when you said who wants to eat rice and beans for five years when tomorrow is not promised as my mom always tells me no it’s not a good feeling to have debt but in this life your always going to owe someone if you buy a car your going to owe someone if you buy a home your going to owe someone and even when you pay off the house and car if you don’t pay the necessary taxes on them someone can still take them away at anytime so there’s just no real way to ever completely escape it. What Dave Ramsey teaches people is how to manage their debt and you seem like your smart enough to do that on your own. So just sit back relax and enjoy the fact that you’ve made it this far. In time you’ll begin making more and more income to help you pay off some of your life’s debt. In the meantime just do what you can and pay what you can knowing as my mother told me your always going to owe someone so you might as well get use to that fact.

    • @darlenepaul2934
      @darlenepaul2934 6 років тому +1

      kendell patel Yeah and Americans have so much common sense.Thats why they live beyond their means and have tons of debt.

    • @KiloByte69
      @KiloByte69 6 років тому

      +Darlene Paul Debt is a serious problem throughout the world, you moron. Thankfully Americans are starting to wise up and tune in to financial advisers like Dave Ramsey.

  • @user-wm2tw
    @user-wm2tw 4 роки тому +1

    You will be well compensated. Make sure to pay it off. Stop crying. After 3 years you will be making a lot more money. If you didn’t want to be a physician because it’s too much to juggle you should not go into medicine.
    Those are the facts. You can’t have it all.

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      @hughrobert6189 4 роки тому

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  • @alfonso_tt
    @alfonso_tt 6 років тому +10

    pray to Father God in Jesus Christ name in the Son to erase your financial debt. God bless you

  • @chelseaduran762
    @chelseaduran762 6 років тому +1

    So she takes out $335,000 worth of loans, buys a new home, spends $1,000 a month on dine in food and said she refuses to eat rice and beans, now she wants tax payers to grant her loan forgiveness because she’s not willing to pay it back herself. She might be book smart but she’s clearly not street smart in anyway....

    • @benstr8156
      @benstr8156 6 років тому

      $335,000 divided by 6 yrs = $55,800 / year.

  • @wdeemarwdeemar8739
    @wdeemarwdeemar8739 6 років тому +65

    You will pay it off in nothing flat don’t even sweat it. When you are earning over 200 k you will have an entire paycheck every month to pay your debt.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +65

      If you’re earning 200k, you’re actually only taking home 100k after taxes. But yes we plan to put everything towards the loan till it’s paid off 🤞🏼

    • @wdeemarwdeemar8739
      @wdeemarwdeemar8739 6 років тому +24

      Jenny Le I was a hospital director over four service areas (nurse not a physician) I earned 243k here in Cali which is super high taxes. I had 96 k debt for two masters degrees. I paid Sallie Mae off in three years and one month. To get my taxable income down I put over 20 percent of income into my tsa and an additional 18.5 k in my after tax account. This has earned roughly 13.7 percent interest since 2006 when I started doing this. I still was able to pay my mortgage and bills in one and pay the loan with the other. Of the nine hundred or so physicians I work with very few with any modicum of self discipline can’t swing the debt you have. And you Doc have got self discipline in spades. You will do this. If you can have a kid and do a residency you can do anything. So cute... hurts my eyes.

    • @redsloane879
      @redsloane879 6 років тому +4

      Jenny Le You need to create a private business, then you only pay business tax; you can pay yourself either a salary or by dividends from the company. Maybe look into it! Big savings on taxes.

    • @PaulTranPharmacist
      @PaulTranPharmacist 6 років тому +15

      Your tax calculation is way off. You do not get taxed 50%. If you living in a state that does not have state income tax you should be taking home around $150k/year. Federal Income Tax, Social Security, Medicare Tax will be roughly $50k per year. Since you own a home, have a child, and if you itemize your taxes your take home should be higher than $150k per year on a 200k salary.

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому +4

      Paul Tran Pharmacist she lives in cali with the highest taxes. it is 50% for her income.

  • @JMS1089
    @JMS1089 6 років тому +3

    Holy smokes. My friend got a free ride for under grad than joined the army to pay the debt.

  • @GeminiPeach81
    @GeminiPeach81 6 років тому +93

    I agree with you about Dave Ramsey. Why struggle to repay a loan that you may never repay. I think that after x amount of payments and years, they should forgive all student loans, federal and private.

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому +36

      Lula Belle when u forgive people debt it doesnt disappear. it only transfers to the tax payer.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +28

      Tax payers are also paying for the millions of people who don’t have health insurance that are going to the emergency department.

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому +1

      Jenny Le yeah true.

    • @hummingbird1016
      @hummingbird1016 6 років тому +13

      Filmon Tewolde I think you should spend more time trying to terminate the life time retirement by those worthless do nothing congressional members. Six figure retirement per year for sitting on their arse doing nothing. I the tax payer do not mind absorbing the costs for students who are going into the medical, engineering and technical fields because that’s where we need the people.

    • @user-lu6yg3vk9z
      @user-lu6yg3vk9z 6 років тому +6

      humming bird huh...majority of U.S. citizens dont want to pay other peoples debt that includes medical school grads. that is the reality, but i do agree get rid of the worthless politicians.

  • @ace1gl
    @ace1gl 6 років тому +6

    My wife ended up with about $330K when she was done. On her first contract we were able to negotiate 30k a year for 3 years repayment from the hospital she joined. That helped a lot. Luckily she was able to consolidate it when she was done with less than 3% interest rate. At that rate with inflation I consider it almost free money so we are not in a hurry to pay it back. It has been about 8 years now and we still owe about 170k on it. We live very middle class. I would guess our income is double everyone else's in our addition. We drive newer cars but they are nothing fancy and every other year we take a very nice vacation. We can pretty much do whatever we want when we want. So if you were to do that you could payoff debt a little faster or live a little higher lifestyle. I also know some doctors that pick up an extra shift at an urgent care or as a small hospital and use that money to payoff their loans quicker. Everything in balance would be my advice.

    • @jg2964
      @jg2964 6 років тому

      just curious, which company is giving you less than 3% interest rate, fixed or variable?

    • @ace1gl
      @ace1gl 6 років тому

      It is at 2.33% we got it from American education services. I think congress changed student consolidation loans so you can't get that low of rates anymore. Glad we got hers done before those changes went into effect.

  • @darlenepaul2934
    @darlenepaul2934 6 років тому +4

    You're saying now I don't want to eat rice and beans.You should've thought about that when you were racking up so much debt.Now you have to eat rice and beans to pay your debt.Plus what were you thinking of buying a home when you have $350000 in debt? Seriously!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  6 років тому +4

      That’s very narrow minded. Let me educate you real quick.
      No I do not have to eat rice and beans because the health affects of staying on that diet for an extended amount of time includes but not limited to obesity, diabetes, heart disease, etc. For you to pay off your loans a few years earlier, you have destroyed your one body and health that you have to live with for the rest of your life. Ultimately your years of health issues will cost you more than the loan itself.
      Second. There is such a thing as smart investments. Renting for a family of 3 was 2200 minimum. While mortgage is 1600. Over the past year the value of my home increase by 10% and so hence, I made money.
      You should really do your own research before you’re so quick to judge.

    • @anmol3457
      @anmol3457 6 років тому

      Jenny Le "what were you thinking while buying a home" seriously I'm surprised you managed to keep your cool and answer such a moron .

    • @anmol3457
      @anmol3457 6 років тому

      Darlene Paul you're clearly stupid and ignorant.

    • @TheCrusaders13
      @TheCrusaders13 6 років тому

      Jim Yang she was being sarcastic. Duh. I also don’t think she said anything about moving.

    • @__________________________7455
      @__________________________7455 6 років тому

      Jim Yang in her situation, the house was a wise purchase. As mentioned her house note is cheaper than rent and her equity has grown. In addition, she could rent a room out in her home , to make money to pay off those student debts sooner. Also, don't forget the tax benefits you have buying vs. renting a home.

  • @nkyryry
    @nkyryry 6 років тому +2

    Dave Ramsey is a genius. It’s no different than you telling a patient to eat better & stop smoking. Ya no shit. But coming from an expert in the field, common sense sounds like good advice.

  • @bhanumavani500
    @bhanumavani500 6 років тому +1

    Would u recommend eating grasshopper powder as protein source to cut on my food expenses to pay back my loan

  • @dr.sparks6461
    @dr.sparks6461 6 років тому +1

    Do u have a husband to help you

  • @jjlatinopedia
    @jjlatinopedia 6 років тому +2

    I know this idea isnt for everyone, but those loans can be paid for by the military if you decided to join. Plus you'd start off as a Captain (O3).

  • @gsp-thechosenone4949
    @gsp-thechosenone4949 6 років тому +2

    6% interest, omg. american schools are good but not that much better than other countries schools to charge so much, doctors not being able to pay for their own treatment is what you get as a result

  • @jaysteven8135
    @jaysteven8135 6 років тому +2

    No one cares if you went to school for 10 years it’s not a good thing lol

  • @RangerRickTV
    @RangerRickTV 6 років тому

    Buy a cheaper used car, no car payments! Eat in no matter what and don't eat out! Get a roommate and possibly sell your house if you have one. Have a garage sale!! Also, try not to have any kids for the time being. You want to own your stuff, you don't want your stuff to own you. In other words be as froogle as you can be. You may want to save water, maybe reuse the same paper towels twice instead of once. ect.....ect..........

  • @anthonymarquez6493
    @anthonymarquez6493 6 років тому +2

    States have programs for doctors and nurses where they will pay your student loan if you work for them. Physicians and nurses also can have there students loan paid back if they go into the military. I think the federal government also has similar programs

  • @minimalmiss
    @minimalmiss 6 років тому +1

    I feel like to reach a goal you always have the option of adjusting your life style. I saw this video that mentions instead of adjusting your lifestyle to reach your goals you end up changing your goals to adjust your lifestyle and I find it very true. You don't have to literally eat rice and beans lol. I do feel it would be terrible to be paying off loans and then not enjoying life and dying, but there are plenty of things you can do with your family that are free or cost a little bit of money. You could also save for fun rewards once you hit a certain milestone. Because it would also stink to not die and still be living with student loans 20 or 30 years from now, even 10 I think. Just my take :)

  • @nj2mddude205
    @nj2mddude205 6 років тому +1

    Aren't there programs that offer loan forgiveness/repayment in exchange for agreeing to work in rural and underserved areas?

  • @dr.sparks6461
    @dr.sparks6461 6 років тому +1

    He need to be making good money too and that's real talk

  • @DimplesonDemand
    @DimplesonDemand 6 років тому +1

    Yes he is telling you things that you already know, but the results will be you being debt free. You will enjoy life, you will be happy.

  • @TrickNPlay
    @TrickNPlay 6 років тому

    Ok....I think I can get through my measly little $50k+ debt after my masters. At the middle of the video you asked how would some with debt go about paying it off? Before finishing my masters I'm going to pay off my car loan in January or February. From there, yes, I plan to pay $25k per year for 2 years. It makes me sad because I have to delay getting a house and kids until my mid to late 30's.

  • @ryanturner8577
    @ryanturner8577 6 років тому +1

    The biggest issue is having a monthly take home of 13k and only saving 5600$ of that.
    I understand the simplicity and obviousness of Dave Ramsey, but there is a difference between knowing and actually doing. Most don't implement all of his "obvious" steps correctly, in which they typically fail.
    My thoughts:
    1. You're ahead of the game because you understand the severity of the loans and are trying to attack the planning process already to pay them back.
    2. I'd pay off all other debt besides the loans and the mortgage first.
    3. Really dig in and attack the loans right away, and then hopefully you can increase your pay as time goes on. The main goal I believe is to get your household income to exceed the debt. Once that happens, you will have a much easier and more practical time finishing it off.
    4. I think 4-5 years is pretty doable. Just set a budgeted yearly income to live off of that includes a buffer for things like car repairs, house issues, etc. Then the rest attack the debt. The quicker the better and the less you can live on the better. Otherwise if this takes longer than 4-5 years the interest is just money being pissed away and you will have a hard time coming to terms with not being able to use that money to save in your 401k, roth ira's, or other means, or to save money for your kids college, or start paying off the house.
    Basically It is just getting together with your husband and setting a defined yearly living salary and a monthly budget, sticking to it no matter what, and just attack. Sell your cars and buy cheaper ones, see if your husband can pick up a side gig or can push his income even a little higher, etc. I don't or have not yet seen any other way to practically pay off loans. Every other weary scheme is just that...a weary scheme.
    Good luck!

  • @ImAfricanJesus
    @ImAfricanJesus 6 років тому

    So you dont want to grind and pay off the loans in 5 years because you could die tomorrow and not really experience life. So what happens say in 5 years, you cant work no more for some reason and you still have tens of thousands of dollars in debt? There is also more to Dave Ramsey's video beside budgeting tips and advice. He explains the importance of being debt free and building wealth. As long as you have those loans, you are in debt and essential a slave to them until they are repaid. You should want financial peace.

  • @GregoryEsman
    @GregoryEsman 6 років тому

    Jenny, some of the people I know were able to pay off their loans early by sharing holistic nutrition systems. Maybe it can help you bring some extra figures in too! It should fit in perfectly with your career path and what you’re working towards

  • @abdulrennane9876
    @abdulrennane9876 6 років тому

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  • @dannylozano5885
    @dannylozano5885 6 років тому

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  • @marriagecapital101
    @marriagecapital101 6 років тому

    You'll be making enough money to pay it off once u get going. Your $300000 is like everyone else's 50000.

  • @echoingamy
    @echoingamy 6 років тому

    you talk about wanting to live life in case you die. That debt will keep you from living life.

  • @mcclaryo148
    @mcclaryo148 6 років тому +1

    Just my humble opinion, but I think Dave Ramsay’s plan could really help you. He would tell you, you have broke doctors syndrome. You get a great income and it goes out the door making payments to everyone but yourself. You have lived like no one else so that you could get your incredible education. You have sacrificed and delayed pleasure for so long. What’s another 5 years to make sure you and your family are set for life. How much money would you have to do whatever you want, if you didn’t have to make payments every month?

  • @KaleeDreams
    @KaleeDreams 6 років тому

    I have a masters and owe $230,000. I get depressed about it. I don't know what to do.

  • @maryshaffer8474
    @maryshaffer8474 6 років тому +1

    She has the earning potential to p at it. Many do not have an earning potential after college.