Sometimes a phone call to a financial advice show hits differently. LaRhonda from Roanoke, Virginia, dialed into "The Ramsey Show" with a question that made personal finance expert Dave Ramsey pause. She's 59, working two jobs, carrying $258,000 in student loan debt, and earning about $60,000 a year from her primary job. She wanted to know if there was any way to make that loan balance just disappear.
"Good Lord," Ramsey responded after confirming her age.
Three Degrees, One Big Problem
The story gets more complicated when you look at LaRhonda's educational background. She holds three degrees: a bachelor's in multidisciplinary studies focusing on criminal justice and religion, a master's in accounting, and a master's in divinity with an emphasis on theology and homiletics. That's a lot of education, which helps explain the six-figure debt load.
But there's another piece to this puzzle. LaRhonda explained that much of the debt came from Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students—loans she took out to fund her son's college education. So she's not just paying for her own credentials, she's paying for his too.
When Your Degree Doesn't Match Your Paycheck
Here's where things got interesting. Ramsey asked the obvious question: Why is someone with a master's degree in accounting pulling in just $60,000 a year? LaRhonda said she looked into accounting positions in her area, and they actually paid less than what she's currently making.
Co-host George Kamel pressed further, asking if she was even working in accounting. She wasn't. LaRhonda works as a logistics specialist at Volvo Trucks—a perfectly respectable job, but not one that typically requires a master's in accounting or divinity.
Kamel pointed out that her degrees weren't really being utilized in her current role. Ramsey acknowledged that accounting skills can translate to logistics work, but noted that her multidisciplinary criminal justice degree wasn't factoring into her job at all. Looking at her age and loan balance together, Ramsey said the numbers were "disturbing" and told her bluntly that she had "not monetized your knowledge base very well."
It's Not The Debt, It's The Income
The conversation shifted to what Ramsey sees as the real problem. The debt itself isn't the issue, he said—it's that the numbers simply don't work at her current income level. He pointed out that many people with a master's degree in accounting earn six figures, often starting somewhere between $100,000 and $125,000.
"I'd like you to be at 120 heading towards 220," Ramsey told her. He noted that Roanoke is "not a backward town" and should have opportunities for higher-paying roles. He also said supply chain positions generally pay more than $60,000.
LaRhonda explained that the employers she's talked with expect experience with accounting software like SAP, a widely used enterprise system. Her coursework, she said, focused on manual accounting methods rather than software-based systems.
Ramsey wasn't buying it as an excuse. Accounting has been computer-driven for decades, he said, and learning those systems is just part of the job now. He told LaRhonda that at this point in her career, increasing her income is the only way the math works. She needs to push aggressively into higher-earning opportunities—a shift he colorfully described as the moment when you have to "leave the cave, kill something" to fundamentally change your financial trajectory.
It's harsh advice, but the underlying point is hard to argue with. When you're 59 with a quarter million in debt and a mortgage, you can't finesse your way out with budgeting tricks. You need to earn significantly more money, and that means making uncomfortable moves in your career—whether that's learning new software, taking a job that stretches your skills, or pivoting entirely. The cave metaphor might be dramatic, but the math is pretty straightforward.




