What does it feel like to be a self-made millionaire under the age of 25?

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Saw it on Quora today

Question - What does it feel like to be a self-made millionaire under the age of 25?

Answer 1

I've been featured on the homepage of Yahoo! as a millionaire, offered 3 separate reality TV shows - including that terrible Millionaire Dating one on Bravo. I bought a luxury car with cash on my 16th birthday, owned a house a few years later.

Hitting $1m was a non-event, I don't even know the exact date it happened. The dividends just all of a sudden added up, and it was there. I celebrated by buying myself a used Rolex. A few years later I also did a vacation where I "tried to spend as much money as possible" - but I still found myself gravitating towards "values" on the wine list rather than blowing it all out by spending thousands on a bottle, which I thought was silly.

Hitting 8-figures was a bit more substantial, I knew it meant I'd never, ever have to work again unless something went terribly wrong. The closing call with the law firm was one of the biggest anti-climaxes of my life. I had already "owned" the money in my head years before hand, so seeing it crystallize on my bank statement didn't make a huge difference, except that it freed me up to start tackling bucket-list items.

I had been postponing so many experiences with the idea of "doing it at some point in the future when I made it" that I just started tackling them one by one. Superbowl. Sundance. SobeFest. Africa. A month around Europe. 3-Star Michelin dining.

The only "awkward" thing I keep running into repeatedly, is other people's comments about wealth or money. Whether it's a tour guide pointing out a hotel that costs $1000/night and everybody in the tour bus gasps (and it's where I'm staying) or taxi drivers making snarky comments about millionaires, or people suggesting it's my "lucky day and I should buy a lotto ticket" - I run into it repeatedly and predictably, but I always tend to keep my mouth shut and not say anything.

Along the way, the most interesting phenomenon has been "adaptation". Moving from a $300K apartment to a $1m one barely made a difference after the first month.

Jumping from that to something 60% bigger, and oceanfront (on the beach) that was worth over $2m barely made a blip after the first few weeks.

Buying a fancy, fast sports car - yes, I did it, but again people tend to massively overestimate the "joy" or "happiness" that a particular item will give them vs. reality. After a few weeks, it just sits there. The anticipation, wait and planning is almost better than the realization of the event itself.

When they say "it's all about the journey, rather than the destination" that's absolutely true. The part that I've most enjoyed is hanging out, meeting and become friends with amazing, successful, smart and ambitious entrepreneurs. It's inspiring, invigorating, and just plain fun.

I still don't have a private plane or NetJets card, I fly economy-class around North America most of the time, I don't even have a maid to do my cleaning. I prefer to buy clothes when they go on sale, and I cringe at people who waste thousands on Gucci-this or Prada-that. I upgrade my MacBook every few years, not every model. I still use an original iPad. I've never bought a new car (except for my parents). The biggest TV in my apartment is 42".

Experiences, even when they cost thousands of dollars a day, so far have been my best investments. I've stopped postponing as much as I used to. The best time is "now", but to be honest, I could have done many of these things much earlier, and on a lower-budget, and probably still had a great time.

Try this as a test--

Make a list of all physical things you would buy if you had $10 million. Let your mind roam free. Don't limit yourself to the reasonable.

It's not that long, is it?

And if you worked a decade or more to earn that money, you'd cross 90% of the items off that list anyway. There's amazingly few physical things that are worth spending money on once you've covered the basics. If I gave you $100K in cash and told you to spend it in a day, you'd be hard pressed unless you bought jewelry, or a car.

Gadgets? Clothes? A bigger TV? Unless money fell from the sky into your lap, you're probably going to be quite pragmatic about what you invest in. There's a reason why most lottery winners end up bankrupt within a few years.

The utility of money once you get past a certain threshold is very limited. And I honestly think that most people who want to be "rich" don't really mean it. What they are really saying is that they'd like someone to hand them a check.

But when push comes to shove, and there's hard work, sacrifices, and tears involved, they'd rather spend 4-hours a day watching TV along with the rest of America.

Answer to Wealthy People and Families: What does it feel like to be a self-made millionaire under the age of 25? - Quora
 


Can you copy and paste a few of the good answers? I really don't feel like signing up to another site.
 
Answer 2
At age 22, nothing fazes you, not even making a million dollars. Making millions quickly becomes normal, and you realize you've achieved nothing relative to the tremendous riches in this world; the skew is so high in the upper echelons of wealth that your net worth is numerically closer to someone on welfare than to Mark Zuckerberg. Millions is the level where another bold kid with vision and drive could easily surpass you in a few years, the level where it's unclear you wouldn't be better off being one of his share holding employees than out taking risks on your own.

It only takes a few expensive toys for millions to become boring. Who wants overpriced versions of what everyone has? Fancy cars quickly reveal themselves to be huge pains in the ass: stick shift is senselessly annoying in the city and the wheels are constantly acquiring minute, infuriating blemishes. You can only drive one car at a time, live in one house at a time, be on one paradise island at a time. Objects drag you down; time is the only thing that matters. Private jets are not what you do because you want to have fun, they're what you to do to save time (time = money). You do the math: a private jet makes sense if it saves you x amount of time and your time is valued at y. Surprisingly few people understand these calculations.

With a few million, you can't afford the really cool stuff like the Bat Cave, or immortality, or a private island doubling as a giant research laboratory with a volcano in the shape of your skull. To really level up, you need at least billions. This ambition is something few understand. If you told them about it, they'd look at you with baffled disgust, "How much money do you need? Why would you want that?"

It's a solitary journey. You're the youngest and most underdressed person in any restaurant you go to. You give money to parents who can't hope to offer you career advice. After achieving more than most people ever achieve financially, what are you supposed to do- retire for the next 50 years? Not an option- you are not, nor have you ever been, like most people. You can't hold yourself to their standards or look to them for cues on goals to strive for- can people your age really be considered your peers when they are so different? For most, setting up 401K's and avoiding credit card fees is gospel, whereas for you it's almost not worth the time relative to what else you could be working on. Normal people are on a path containing marriage, babies, some career ladder. The comfort of a patterned route is barred from you: you alone must write your next act because no one can afford to hire you.

Most people dream of a house, a family, money for vacations. When you can have all of that at an age before you're ready to get married, what else is there to reach for? People think you're lucky because they imagine you share the same American dream, because they don't know what really drives you. What would be so terrible about settling down, traveling the world, learning about wines, maybe writing a book?

The answer to this question is a slow, slow terror. Your whole life you've monotonically increased in awesomeness. What if that trend has ended? What if you peaked in your 20's? Will you ever be able to surpass your previous success? Or was your success due to your reckless youth, which is inevitably fleeting? What's the difference between dying a millionaire at 25 and a millionaire at 75? What will it feel like to look back years from now and think you haven't changed at all, instead of marveling at how far you've come? Shall you live and die like a beast, quiet, leaving no mark on the universe?

Luckily, you didn't major in philosophy. It's not your nature to be unhappy and you genuinely love life. Everywhere you turn, the world sparkles with distracting wonders, challenging problems, tantalizing mysteries. You work on projects, learn new skills and ideas, visit new places, love and understand yourself and others.
Answer to Wealthy People and Families: What does it feel like to be a self-made millionaire under the age of 25? - Quora
 
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Can you copy and paste a few of the good answers? I really don't feel like signing up to another site.

FYI, Quora's registration is one-click and you don't need to verify your email before you can start reading.

Thanks for the share Faceblogger.
 
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This answer seems particularly apt for the IM world, especially points 2 and 3:

I was 26 or 27 by the time I did it so I guess I'll answer for people I know who did it before 25. Online poker created (and still creates) lots of young single-digit millionaires. Many (but not all) exhibit some of the same behaviors and thought patterns:

  • They tend to view almost anybody who isn't making millions playing poker as less-intelligent, almost beneath them. This is very common and probably stems from poker being a hierarchical meritocracy where those at the top are often socially awkward nerds with genius-level IQ's. I'll leave it at that.

  • They treat money very similar to professional athletes. Meaning they mistake their current high-income for their permanent income and spend accordingly. They buy expensive watches and cars, stay in the nicest hotels, run up obscene tabs at nightclubs etc. etc. Poker culture celebrates this, perpetuating the cycle. Odd for a profession which requires high intelligence and excellent money management skills.

  • They feel like they've escaped the rat race. That they'll be able to do whatever they want with the rest of their life. They also know they've mastered skills that translate well to other endeavors (investing, entrepreneurship etc). This is empowering and confidence building. It can also make them lazy and complacent.

  • They find it difficult to relate to and fit in with non-millionaires. This is exacerbated by the fact that everybody treats them differently. Some begin to have contempt for normal people and their hardships (see #1, "if they were smart like me they'd just click buttons and never have to worry about this stuff")
 
Your life will be better off not letting peasants know you're not one of them. Don't even bring it up, or even leave a single clue.*

For some reason, peasants think they can do it just by hearing your words on how you do it. But this shit takes moment to moment vigilance, most like to fantasize.

Just remember, your identity is not a fixed, static thing embedded into the nature of reality. It's different for each mind. And minds for the most part build identities based on the known. So you tell someone you're a millionaire, if they're a peasant they're going to think about that a lot. And it hurts me to make a peasant feel inadequate.


*Clues can be used to bed peasant women, if one is so inclined. But steer clear of bishes earning/have earned psychology degrees.
 
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This answer seems particularly apt for the IM world, especially points 2 and 3:

I don't think I know anybody on here that's.. oh wai...

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1.) Start selling Phone covers on eBay
2.) Make a video of covers.
3.) ?????
4.) Post video on Wickedfire.
5.) ????
6.) Everybody thinks you are a freakin blowjoillionaire

No, he's actually ballin' ;)

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcHjXqV_5mk"]BEEN HAD $70,000 OPTION COMMISSIONS - YouTube[/ame]
 
1.) Start selling Phone covers on eBay
2.) Make a video of covers.
3.) ?????
4.) Post video on Wickedfire.
5.) ????
6.) Everybody thinks you are a freakin blowjoillionaire

Hello friend,

Mcgrunin just donate $2 million charity for Christmas. I no think you can make fun him until you donate more.

Good luck bro