173: Leaving "Soul Crushing" Corporate to Chase Food Truck Dreams with Brent TheFoodTruckCEO (Part 1)

173: Leaving "Soul Crushing" Corporate to Chase Food Truck Dreams with Brent TheFoodTruckCEO (Part 1)

What does the average person do in their 20s? For most people, it means going into student debt, getting a car loan, getting a mortgage, and treating yourself. These are the “average financial decisions” that put many Americans into debt and stuck at jobs they only dream of leaving. That’s how Brent aka TheFoodTruckCEO felt when he and his wife realized they had over $100,000 in consumer debt. Brent and his wife didn’t make any crazy decisions, he merely did what society said is the right thing to do. He and his wife had student loans to cover nursing school, both had car loans, and racked up around $13,000 in credit card debt alone. This doesn’t even include a tractor Brent decided to buy for a future business purpose! Both Brent and his wife were bringing in solid money every month from their nursing jobs, but as soon as the money came in, it somehow flooded right back out. This annoyed Brent, he felt like he wasn’t in control of his money and his life. He went to work on debt, adding up everything they had spent over the past few months and realized he and his wife were eating out far more than needed, wasting groceries they were paying good money for, and jeopardizing their future with random purchases. They cut up the credit cards, started snowballing their debt, reduced their eating out, and stopped shopping at the big box stores. They attacked their debt! Within 5 years, they paid off $109,000 in debt, and started to save up for investments every month. As time went on and Brent got promoted to a more corporate role, he realized that he put himself in a terrific financial position to leave and start his own business. He had accumulated $100,000 in cash, started investing in his business, and now runs a mobile pizza truck, serving delicious woodfired pizza and doing what he loves. In This Episode We Cover Why “average financial decisions” can often trap young people in debt Going over finances with your partner before (and after) getting married How to expense track to see exactly where your money is going Using the “debt snowball” method to get out of debt quickly Creating the “financial runway” you need to invest in your business and future How to have a job exit plan so you can leave on your terms And So Much More! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jaksot(742)

How this Couple Achieved FIRE in Their 30s (Average Income)

How this Couple Achieved FIRE in Their 30s (Average Income)

Sam and Carolyn reached financial independence in their thirties through frugality, real estate investing, and building side hustles that generated $10,000 per month. Then they made a bold move—quitti...

16 Joulu 20251h 8min

Financial Independence Through the Unthinkable: A Healthcare Crisis

Financial Independence Through the Unthinkable: A Healthcare Crisis

Join Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench for a powerful conversation with Regina Moore, who achieved millionaire status before 35 through frugality and her career as a pharmacist. But when her young son was...

12 Joulu 202553min

The Ultimate Guide to Early Retirement Drawdown (2026)

The Ultimate Guide to Early Retirement Drawdown (2026)

Building a $2.5 million portfolio is hard. Spending it without running out? That's even harder. Welcome to the 700th episode of the BiggerPockets Money Podcast! To mark this milestone, hosts Mindy Je...

9 Joulu 202549min

The Case for Blended (Instead of Sequential) Drawdown for Early Retirees

The Case for Blended (Instead of Sequential) Drawdown for Early Retirees

Are you using the wrong retirement withdrawal strategy? Sequential drawdown—draining one account before touching the next—is the most common approach to early retirement, but it could be costing you t...

5 Joulu 20251h 10min

If We Started FIRE Over in 2025, Here's Exactly What We'd Do

If We Started FIRE Over in 2025, Here's Exactly What We'd Do

What would you do differently if you could start your FIRE journey over today? Back in 2013, Scott was fresh out of college house hacking his way to financial independence, while Mindy and her husban...

2 Joulu 202536min

Does Money Buy Happiness? What the FIRE Community Gets Wrong

Does Money Buy Happiness? What the FIRE Community Gets Wrong

What happens after you achieve financial independence? Former Facebook employee turned comedian Paul Ollinger discovered the answer wasn't what he expected—and it completely changed how he thinks abou...

28 Marras 202549min

Will 2026 Healthcare Costs Destroy Financial Independence for Millions?

Will 2026 Healthcare Costs Destroy Financial Independence for Millions?

Will 2026 healthcare costs destroy your FIRE plan? Enhanced ACA tax credits expire in 2026—meaning health insurance premiums could DOUBLE or TRIPLE overnight. This healthcare subsidy cliff threatens m...

25 Marras 202553min

Proof You Don't Need a High Salary for FIRE (Teacher Retires at 50)

Proof You Don't Need a High Salary for FIRE (Teacher Retires at 50)

Think you need a six-figure salary to retire early? Think again. Middle school teacher Andrew Luman is achieving financial independence and retiring at 50—all on a teacher's salary. In this episode of...

21 Marras 202550min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
mimmit-sijoittaa
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-rahapodi
rss-sisalto-kuntoon
rss-rahamania
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
rahapuhetta
herrasmieshakkerit
sijoituspodi
rss-karon-grilli
leadcast
asuntoasiaa-paivakirjat
rss-lahtijat
rss-startup-ministerio
rss-paasipodi
rss-yrittajan-mindset
rss-draivi
pomojen-suusta
rss-valaistumisia-tyoelamasta