If you’ve ever talked yourself out of something you know would make your life feel better—new sheets, a weekend away, the bag you’ve had in your cart for six months—because “I can’t justify that”… this episode is for you.
In this episode of I Mean This In The Nicest Way Possible, RAM unpacks why so many of us feel guilty for wanting comfort, beauty, and ease—and why constantly denying ourselves small joys is not “being responsible,” it’s self-neglect with good PR. From scarcity mindset to learned deprivation, he breaks down how we quietly decide some experiences are “not for people like me,” even when they’re well within reach.
This week, RAM dives into the psychology of scarcity versus abundance—how family messages, culture, and hustle mentality train us to shrink our desires—and what actually changes when you start treating yourself like someone worth nice things now, not someday. He explores how small, intentional upgrades can transform your daily life, your nervous system, and your sense of self-worth without sabotaging your bank account.
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Then RAM gets personal. He shares the quiet decision he made years ago to stop living in permanent “maybe later” mode—and what changed when he started saying yes to the bags, boots, trips, and experiences that genuinely lit him up. From caviar on a Tuesday to TSA PreCheck, quality pillows, and small daily luxuries, he shows how intentional indulgence became less about flexing and more about self-respect.
And because this show is about action, not just awareness, RAM introduces The Press The Yes Challenge—a simple, doable experiment where you choose one thing this week that makes your life feel even 2% richer, and give yourself permission to say yes to it on purpose. Not recklessly. Not for the internet. Just because you are allowed to enjoy your own life.
This episode isn’t about materialism.
It’s about worth.
It’s about refusing to build your entire life around the bare minimum version of yourself.
If you’ve got 30 minutes, RAM means this in the nicest way possible: it’s okay to allow yourself to have nice things.
Sometimes the kindest thing you can do… is be real.