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217: Don’t Quit Your Job, “Fire Your Boss” on Your Terms w/ Rahkim Sabree

BiggerPockets Money Podcast

English - July 26, 2021 06:00 - 1 hour - ★★★★★ - 2.8K ratings
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Rahkim Sabree “aspired to be poor” when he was growing up. He saw his parents collecting section 8 housing vouchers, getting food stamps, and thought that this was the way life was. He didn’t grow up around many homeowners. All of his friends lived in apartment rentals and were in the same financial situation as him. There were no “financial literacy talks” at Rahkim's dinner table.
It wasn’t until Rahkim left college and got a banking job that he decided to look at where his money was going and what it was doing for him. He started reading books like Rich Dad Poor Dad and The Millionaire Next Door, which shifted his mindset and gave him the foundation to chase financial freedom. He bought a duplex, house hacked it, and started throwing all the money he could into investments.
As his own financial knowledge began to grow, he was able to share what he learned with others. He’s written two books, spoken at TEDx talks, and been invited to numerous conferences to speak. This didn’t bode well with his employer, who would consistently ask him whether his outside-of-work activities were clashing with his nine-to-five responsibilities. After hearing this over and over again, he decided to “fire his boss” and focus on building his own income, all without an emergency reserve stashed away! 
In This Episode We Cover
Why it’s so difficult to break out of poverty without financial education
Deciding to house hack so your mortgage can be offset 
Why you should always keep a safety reserve in case of emergencies 
Maxing out your 401(k), HSA, and ESPP contributions 
Thinking of low-interest credit as another type of safety reserve
Knowing when the appropriate time to leave your W2 is 
And So Much More!


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Rahkim Sabree “aspired to be poor” when he was growing up. He saw his parents collecting section 8 housing vouchers, getting food stamps, and thought that this was the way life was. He didn’t grow up around many homeowners. All of his friends lived in apartment rentals and were in the same financial situation as him. There were no “financial literacy talks” at Rahkim's dinner table.

It wasn’t until Rahkim left college and got a banking job that he decided to look at where his money was going and what it was doing for him. He started reading books like Rich Dad Poor Dad and The Millionaire Next Door, which shifted his mindset and gave him the foundation to chase financial freedom. He bought a duplex, house hacked it, and started throwing all the money he could into investments.

As his own financial knowledge began to grow, he was able to share what he learned with others. He’s written two books, spoken at TEDx talks, and been invited to numerous conferences to speak. This didn’t bode well with his employer, who would consistently ask him whether his outside-of-work activities were clashing with his nine-to-five responsibilities. After hearing this over and over again, he decided to “fire his boss” and focus on building his own income, all without an emergency reserve stashed away! 

In This Episode We Cover

Why it’s so difficult to break out of poverty without financial education

Deciding to house hack so your mortgage can be offset 

Why you should always keep a safety reserve in case of emergencies 

Maxing out your 401(k), HSA, and ESPP contributions 

Thinking of low-interest credit as another type of safety reserve

Knowing when the appropriate time to leave your W2 is 

And So Much More!



Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices