Financial Fitness – Q&A - Money Doc in the Hot Seat!
What happens when real financial questions come in live — and there’s no script?
In this episode of Financial Fitness with The Money Doctor, Jess fires unscripted money questions from viewers, and Dr. Frances Rahaim responds in real time with thoughtful, practical, and often surprising answers.
No canned advice. No one-size-fits-all solutions. Just honest questions about money — and deeper conversations about what’s really going on beneath the surface.
Topics include:
• What to do when you owe more than your car is worth
• Whether to pay off debt or save for retirement first
• How to know when spoiling your grandchildren is financially harmful
• Talking with your adult children about money survival - for you both
and more.
What makes this show different is context. The right financial answer is rarely just about math — it depends on the whole picture. That’s where clarity begins.
Learn more at HugYourMoney.com.
Show Breakdown:
Money Questions, Real-Life Pressure, and the First Steps Toward Financial Control
Real Questions From Real Financial Lives
In this episode of Financial Fitness with the Money Doctor, host Dr. Frances Rahaim joins co-host Jess Tyler for a listener Q&A focused on practical financial problems that are also emotional, relational, and psychological. Jess explains that Frances has not seen the questions in advance, which gives the show a spontaneous, real-world feel. The episode addresses credit card debt, emergency savings, retirement worries, adult children needing support, upside-down car loans, Social Security timing, grandparent spending, buy-now-pay-later services, and anxiety around opening bills.
Credit Card Debt Versus Emergency Savings
The first listener, Melissa from Greenfield, asks whether she should use her $1,000 in savings to attack $6,000 in credit card debt. Dr. Rahaim advises against draining all savings to pay the card, even though the interest rate may be high. She explains that without emergency reserves, the next unexpected expense may simply send the person back to the credit card. Her advice is to balance both priorities: continue building cash reserves while also sending something extra toward principal, but only after tracking real spending and understanding how the debt was created in the first place.
Starting Retirement Savings at 48
Kevin from Turners Falls asks whether it is too late to make a meaningful difference if he is 48 and has very little saved for retirement. Dr. Rahaim says it is never too late, but stresses that “meaningful” needs to be defined carefully. She explains that if someone is carrying debt, especially a mortgage, car loan, credit cards, or student loans, then paying down debt strategically may sometimes function like retirement planning because it frees future cash flow. She encourages people to compare scenarios: saving while carrying debt versus using structured debt-reduction strategies that eventually open up more room for retirement contributions.
Helping Adult Children Without Sacrificing Retirement
Donna from Shelburne Falls asks how to help an adult son who is struggling financially without damaging her own retirement. Dr. Rahaim says this is one of the hardest questions for parents because they are used to putting children first. She advises having an honest adult-to-adult conversation, explaining personal retirement limits without blame, and inviting the child into a cooperative plan. Rather than continuing to act as an ATM, she recommends shifting toward a “buddy system” where both parent and child work on financial improvement together, while the parent avoids lecturing or shaming.
Upside-Down Car Loans and Social Security Timing
In the second half, Mona asks what to do when a car payment is consuming too much of her paycheck while she owes more than the car is worth. Dr. Rahaim explains several options, including repossession, refinancing or recasting the loan, trading the vehicle and rolling negative equity into another loan, or selling the car and borrowing only enough to cover the shortfall. She says repossession is often the path people fall into, but it damages credit and may still leave a balance owed. Tom from Colrain then asks about taking Social Security early versus waiting. Dr. Rahaim says the decision depends on need, health, life expectancy, and personal circumstances, but all things being equal, she tends to favor waiting because benefits rise by roughly 8% per year.
Grandkids, Buy-Now-Pay-Later, and Hidden Financial Patterns
Nancy from Gill asks how to know when spending on grandchildren is beginning to hurt her finances. Dr. Rahaim says the fact that she is asking the question may already mean it is affecting her mentally or financially. She recommends small pullbacks, teaching children money skills, and using tools like spend-save-share jars rather than abruptly cutting them off. Ashley from Millers Falls asks about buy-now-pay-later services for clothes and household items. Dr. Rahaim warns that these payments can layer quietly until they become unmanageable, comparing them to the frog-in-the-pot effect. She emphasizes awareness, visibility, and understanding how companies use immediate gratification to encourage spending.
Anxiety, Avoidance, and One Small Change
Jason from Orange says his finances are a mess, but he avoids opening bills and checking balances because it makes him anxious. Dr. Rahaim says many people, including wealthy people, experience money anxiety in different ways. Rather than telling him to immediately open every bill, she recommends changing one small, non-threatening thing first, such as taking a daily walk. That positive experience can build confidence, which can later be applied to money tasks in small steps: first bringing bills to the desk, then opening them later. She closes by encouraging listeners to send questions to info@HugYourMoney.com or through Jess, and reminds them they can reach her office by phone or visit HugYourMoney.com.
