Sometimes one monthly payment can quietly destroy your entire financial life. For Corey, a Cleveland truck driver, that payment was $970 a month for a truck he couldn't afford while earning $33 an hour.
When Corey called into The Ramsey Show, he was navigating a divorce, mounting debt, and the kind of financial pressure that makes people desperate for answers. He carried roughly $35,000 in credit card debt personally, with another $30,000 in his wife's name. His bank account balance? About $30. Both sides had hired attorneys, and a court date was looming.
Dave Ramsey's response was immediate and blunt: "Sell your stupid truck, dude. A $970 payment at $33 an hour is in the cray cray zone."
How Team Driving Turned Into Financial Chaos
The financial picture wasn't always this grim. Corey explained that he and his wife previously worked together as long-haul truck drivers, operating as a team and pulling in about $250,000 a year combined. During those years, Corey said he funneled his income into a 401(k) while his wife managed day-to-day spending.
Now, as part of the divorce proceedings, she was seeking a share of the retirement account tied to their married years. The divorce also required all debts to be settled before any agreement could be finalized, leaving Corey stuck in financial limbo.
Before buying the truck, Corey said he had payments on both a Lexus and a motorcycle. He eventually traded both vehicles for his current ride, a 2023 Chevrolet Silverado, which actually lowered his monthly payment by about $500. That detail makes you wonder what the original payments looked like. "I just don't know where to even start," Corey admitted.
The Truck Problem Gets Worse
Corey told Ramsey that a dealership informed him he'd need about $4,000 to get out of the truck loan because of negative equity. Ramsey immediately shot down the idea of trading it in at a dealership.
"He thinks he's got you coming again," Ramsey said, referring to the dealer. Instead, Ramsey suggested selling the truck privately and, if necessary, borrowing the difference from a credit union to eliminate the crushing monthly payment.
The House Battle
The couple's house was appraised at about $174,000, with roughly $132,000 still owed on the mortgage. Corey said his wife wanted to keep the house as part of the divorce settlement.
Ramsey's advice was direct: "Do not let her have the house." His concern wasn't emotional. It was practical. If the mortgage stayed in one name while Corey remained legally responsible, he'd be on the hook if payments weren't made. With about $42,000 in equity in the home and roughly $35,000 in Corey's 401(k), Ramsey suggested using home equity as part of the settlement rather than dividing the retirement account.
Ramsey also reminded Corey that if the two sides couldn't reach an agreement on their own, a judge would simply divide the debts and assets for them. The message was clear: take control now or let the court decide your financial future.
For someone earning about $33 an hour with almost nothing in the bank, every dollar matters. And when nearly $1,000 of those dollars vanish each month into a truck payment, there's not much room left to rebuild.




