I don't think OP is a t
Is it? A Cirrus is ultimately still a light piston single, and with fixed gear, no prop control, and a super capable avionics and autopilot suite to boot. We're not talking about getting your PPL in a PC-12, King Air, CJ5, or even something like an Extra
Plenty of schools have Cirrus in their fleet and plenty of people train and learn on them
The OP, if this is not a troll post, somehow got in way over his head and was unfortunately taken advantage of. But I'm not sure how you can somehow afford a million dollar plane and then complain about a 14,000 annual. And if it's a turbo there's a good chance the turbo is being mishandled and yes can result in several thousand dollars worth of required work and damage, especially if the shop knows they're dealing with someone who's rich and unknowledged
If we're talking cars.. here's how I see it:
C-172: piece of trash 50-year-old dump truck that will not at all prepare you for flying any real airplane. It's like that first Fisher-Price tricycle 4-year-olds ride. Really doesn't teach you anything about flying that you couldn't learn in a book.
SR-22: an automatic BMW 5 series
The Porsche is your TBM.. or if we want to stay piston than at least a Mooney. Which is harder to fly, more sensitive to speed on final and has retractable gear and propeller
No hate against dump trucks by the way. The Aztec, which I absolutely love flying, is also a dump truck, but at least that plane owns that.