Sometimes the hardest part of fixing a financial mess is admitting you're in one. A 27-year-old Walmart worker from Arkansas figured that out and decided to write to The Ramsey Show for help.
In a letter read on air by Rachel Cruze, Dave Ramsey's daughter and co-host, the anonymous writer explained they make $20 an hour working overnight shifts at Walmart. Despite the decent hourly wage, they're drowning in bad habits: borrowing from future paychecks, leaning on cash-advance apps to survive, and blowing most of their income on eating out. The damage? $3,000 on a credit card and $4,000 owed to the IRS.
"If I was disciplined with my money, I wouldn't be in this spot," they wrote. "I'm 27, and I need to get my stuff together."
Recognizing The Problem Is Half The Battle
Ramsey's response started with encouragement. Just acknowledging the mess matters. "When you recognize a problem, 90% of the problem is solved," he said.
To drive the point home, Ramsey shared his own pandemic story. During COVID-19, he said he ate "every donut and every fish within 50 miles" until he realized his choices had consequences. The weight gain wasn't a mystery—it was the result of his behavior.
"I had to change my negative behaviors that were giving me negative results," Ramsey explained. Money works the same way. You need to earn more, spend less, and know where every dollar is going before it leaves your account. Control comes from planning, not hoping.
Behavior Change Beats Budget Tweaks
The transformation starts with a simple admission: "What I'm doing is not working." Ramsey told the writer that breakthroughs happen when behavior shifts, not when you just shuffle numbers around.
Cruze jumped in with practical advice: stop eating out and start meal planning. "Plan what you're going to eat for breakfast, lunch, and dinner," she said. The meals don't need to be fancy—they just need to be affordable and consistent.
Ramsey backed her up with an example. He mentioned a couple who recently appeared on the show earning $170,000 annually. They managed to pay off $289,000 in debt by doing something absurdly simple: packing homemade lunches for work.
The real work, according to Ramsey, is reshaping your identity. "I am not a person that borrows money … I am a person that takes their lunch to work," he said. It's about who you decide to become, not just what you decide to do this week.
Cruze added that change feels uncomfortable because "what's normal feels safe," even when normal is keeping you broke.
Building New Habits That Actually Stick
Ramsey's prescription was straightforward: write a budget before every paycheck arrives and find ways to increase income through extra hours or a better-paying job.
He compared financial discipline to fitness. Real results happen when effort beats comfort. "I'm going to be the one that doesn't eat a donut … because I want a different result," he said.
Ramsey closed with a reality check: "No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but it yields a harvest of righteousness." Most people don't exercise because it's enjoyable—they do it because it works. The same logic applies to budgeting. It strengthens your financial muscles over time, even when it feels tedious.
For the 27-year-old Walmart worker, the path forward is clear. Stop borrowing against tomorrow, plan today's spending, and pack a lunch. The debt won't vanish overnight, but the habits that created it can change starting now.