Acknowledging that material wealth isn't worth much was liberating, and I'm so glad it happened in my early 20s, people who never get out of this mindset must live miserable lives. You really don't need much to live an happy life, especially in the west and especially with IT salaries, if I could I'd work one day a week and that would suffice to maintain my lifestyle. The needs are easy to meet but the wants are limitless, you'll always feel like you're missing something as long as you don't control your emotions.<p>You'll never satisfy a need of something that has no limit, being around rich people will show you that. Two houses, three cars, the best schools for their kids, vacations in the best places, they're still miserable and most of them still work as much if not more than employees, if anything they're even more miserable than the average person because they live in fear of losing it all. Once you unlock the next level you discover it's just as empty as the one you came from, some people are too proud to acknowledge that and keep on climbing, they'll be miserable all the way to the grave because you don't cure that by accumulating goods<p>Take a break, breath in, and ponder on the reasons of your fears/desires. You might very well be sabotaging your well being in a futile quest for wealth, you can't lose the game if you're not playing it.<p>On top of that I'd say if wealth is your goal the best way to never get to it is to chase it directly. You can go through 20 startups creation, if your sole goal is personal wealth you'll most likely miss the point 20 times<p>> Life is well enough furnished, but we are too greedy with regard to its furnishings; something always seems to us lacking, and will always seem lacking. Seneca