There is trillions of dollars in peoples hands that do nothing but buy luxury. What is this ancient desire to be rich? What amount will make you satisfied?
Financial independence (in the "work becomes a choice" sense -- not necessarily after idleness...) is a pretty attractive prospect. Beyond that point, money has rapidly-diminishing returns for me.
We are hypnotized by a few key beliefs which contradict our nature and reality:<p>- that we are separate/isolated from the rest of humanity<p>- that we need to be self-sufficient in order to survive<p>- that money has real value<p>- that without money we don’t have value<p>- that almost everything can measured in money<p>- that making more money is better<p>- that exploitation is ok and doesn’t influence us<p>I disagree that the trillions buy luxury. I’d argue that they expose addiction. We are burning our environment, and our personal lifetimes, faster and faster, to add numbers to wealthy peopke’s Accounts. It’s like redirecting to Dev/null.<p>It is a flow which creates enormous confusion, grasping, suffering, on all scales.<p>I visualize it as the grey tornado thing from stranger things, on planetary level, but especially intense in the US, a country with institutionalized government corruption and the most barbaric industrialized commercial healthcare in the world.<p>On the other hand, money can be used to support and express gratitude.<p>So it’s not really the money, but the hypnosis and the addiction.
For me, there are a couple of motivations:<p>1) Financial freedom and security. Aside from ensuring material needs this is important because it provides a good foundation for autonomy - an important part of self-fulfilment.<p>2) The means to make things happen. I don't want to own things or show off. I do want to facilitate things that I think will be beneficial to people I care about (e.g. help a friend or relative start a business, fund a non-profit, etc).<p>For a lot of people 'getting rich' means flash cars, big houses, and extravagance. I don't want any of that. I want the means to make my world (the one I interact with) a more pleasant place (for myself and others).
I have a desire to be free. I'm working towards never having to look at a fucking computer again. Hopefully by the time I'm 30, I'll have enough to do only need to work about three months year. The rest of the time I'm going to be surfing or rock climbing.
I have a number, well 2. The first being a stepping stone, a marker to reach, the point where I can step back for a year, re-evaluate and consider if I want to shoot for the next target. Neither of the numbers are high, the first with some savy investments I could make last the rest of my life but I'm a relatively simple guy, I could live on ~12k a year easily. That includes rent, bills, food, clothes etc.<p>For me, it's not about stopping work. I generally love the things <i>I</i> do, the projects and concepts I develop in my spare time. For me, that's not working, it's a passion.<p>My second number is all about that, it's about being able to buy the ability to do what ever the fuck <i>I</i> want. Ideally I want a nice plot of land in a relatively remote area with some workshops and enough in the bank where I don't have to worry about bills and I can fund whatever project takes my interest.
What is this ancient desire to be rich?<p>It's the same ancient desire to hunt and survive.<p>With money you can hunt. Without it you will be hunted.<p>When you don't have money you become the subject of the force and influence of those who have it.<p>You will have to live your life on someone else's terms.
The thing is that money stands for <i>everything else</i>.<p>What do you really want? Security? Money can get you that (within limits). Identity? Money can get you that, too (again, within limits). Experiences? Money can get you those (pretty much without limit). To not have to work? Money can get you that. So no matter what you want, it's pretty easy to convince yourself that you could have that, if you only had money.<p>> What amount will make you satisfied?<p>Legend says that, when asked how much it took to be satisfied, John D. Rockefeller said, "Just a little bit more". He was the first billionaire, and the richest person in his day. If it took more for him to be satisfied, well, you're never going to have enough money to get there.<p>Now, as I said, this story is legend (so far as I have been able to determine). Still, the problem is that real satisfaction doesn't come from money. The best you can hope for is to have enough to provide for your needs and at least some of your wants. That's as good as it gets, because beyond that, more money doesn't seem to increase happiness/satisfaction.
I don't know if the assumption that people buy only luxury with their excess money and moreover that the spending of excess money is bad.<p>If you had millionaires and billionaires who lived frugally it would mean no demand for goods and services you and I and most people contribute to. That they can invest in ideas means other people get to work pursuing those ideas.<p>If we didn't seek to be rich (or even wealthy)and we were all just getting by with "living wages", in the first place, we would still be in a place where there was low demand for things and there would be little spare money to do non-essential things. It'd like living in 1980s India or China or Indonesia.<p>On the other hand, frivolous consumption is a problem (disposable thises (these?) and disposable thats (those?) contribute to environmental damage.<p>That said, the best thing we could do is slow pop growth to replacement levels rather than growth. That means educating poor people everywhere and getting them on contraceptives.
Possibly of interest:<p><a href="https://www.marketwatch.com/story/you-can-retire-early-without-adopting-mr-money-mustaches-extreme-frugality-2018-01-11" rel="nofollow">https://www.marketwatch.com/story/you-can-retire-early-witho...</a>
Money plays the part in modern life that food used to play on the plains of Africa. You need it to survive and in the past food could not be kept for long. You had to continually be on the lookout for more, it was fundamental to survival.<p>It was easy enough for people to substitute money for food as the critical thing we need to survive. It's not as easy to give up the instinct of getting more of it everyday.<p>And why should it be easy? This behaviour meant life or death for millions of generations.
The amount necessary to employ and enable every willing capable mind on the planet in the mission of ending aging (and, subsequently, mortality). Silly to most, I'm sure.