Clip4
Touchdown! Greaser!
It depends if you are a spender or a saver. He spender will quickly utilize the money and see and rather quick change to their life. The saver will likely save the money and not change their life much.
$1 moreWhat would change your life financially? You get $10 can almost buy lunch but we're pilots we've spent thousands of dollars on a hobby.
Would 100,000 change your life or how many more zeros you need
You reach a point in life where more time is more valuable than more money.
It is said that when we are young we spend our health for money and when we are old we spend our money for health.You reach a point in life where more time is more valuable than more money.
Debt free is nice.If you have debt, an amount to pay everything off so you can live debt free is life changing.
Money can’t buy happiness….
Money is less meaningful beyond secure sources of food, shelter, and incidentals. It’s time and health that matter.It's an interesting question, because it can lead to other questions. Say the answer is $300M. So what would you do if you were given $300M? The answer is typically "well I'd quit my job." Which leads to the question "Then what would you do?" That answer might be travel, or spend time on some hobby or whatever. Which leads to the question "Well why don't you do that right now?" Or potentially "why do you have a job you hate?"
A smarter guy than me spoke somewhat along those lines:
It's long but I honestly think worth a watch if you haven't seen it before.
Those are two things that are underappreciated until they begin to run short.Money is less meaningful beyond secure sources of food, shelter, and incidentals. It’s time and health that matter.
So what would you do if you were given [$2 Mil]? "Then what would you do?"
"Then what would you do?"
"Well why don't you do that right now?"
"why do you have a job you hate?"
Probably 1.5 to 2 million...
Not having to work.
Being able to financially or physically help others. That's life changing. Sometimes changing more than one life.
...and that's it, for most people everything is some kind of compromise. I wasn't suggesting that anyone should try to make their hobby their career. I actually did that, 40 years ago, but only because "that computer thing" seemed like it might be profitable as well as fun. Well, it worked out OK in terms of money, but it had the side effect of making it much less of a hobby. 10-15 years ago I was thinking of all the things I wanted to do "eventually" and realized that some of them are never going to be convenient or easy. One of them was learning to fly. It wasn't convenient or easy, and certainly not a second career, but I'm glad I did it.Probably 1.5 to 2 million...
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Specifically, I doubt that my passion-projects could (possibly) be able to fund my current lifestyle or even a distant facsimile thereof. Besides, of all the jobs in the world, mine isn't all that bad.
This is a trick question. I’m having a hard time coming up with a figure which would ever make me think snacks at a movie are not too expensive for me to want them.
Yeah, I would never pay more than $20-30 for a pair of shoes. I know how much things cost to make and I'll not pay two or three thousand percent for owning junk.This is a trick question. I’m having a hard time coming up with a figure which would ever make me think snacks at a movie are not too expensive for me to want them.
A good attorney is part of a family office and what the family office should he doing; running your wealth and finances as a business to ensure your objectives are met.…Family Office money. And enough for a good attorney that could set it up my where heirs and their heirs never had to worry about money, but we're not able to "not work"
... only wealthy people fly.