>>60782447 (OP)
The one they never talk about is mid seven figure hell and it's truly the worst.
>Rich enough to taste occasional luxury.
>Not rich enough for sustained luxe vacations, really impressive houses, better than a boring box in the most desirable parts of the country.
>Gets you fives and sixes for women who are easily impressed by your money if you're average or autistic. The shine wears off fast and they will spend like crazy the second you give them a little coin.
>Barely puts a dent in personal freedoms.
So yay, you no longer have to wagecuck ever again. That's the only plus. You feel good for a year or so until the black hole opens.
Then comes slow, grinding suffering as your social circle expands to the truly wealthy and high IQ. You realize how far behind them you are and how hard it is to close the gap.
You're like a monke other people must treat like a man out of politeness.
Nothing makes you feel like more of a misfit freak than small talk with your world-class doctor neighbor and his hot wife, who both have Ivy League degrees and who organize their lives to look picture perfect. You're still a slob with $5 million dollars. Perhaps even a smelly, lonely MAGA bro, the only house on a block of brilliant liberal scientists without a Harris lawn sign.
They wonder what you're doing among them when you're uglier, awkward, less intelligent, and not in medicine. They have happy sex lives several times per week. You seethe outside on your night walks, listening to the moans of their women piercing the massive windows of their McMansions filled with family warmth.
You hate yourself.
You begin to realize time is more constraining than money. And even if you had $10 million or $50 million, it wouldn't buy what they have. If you aren't old money or top school material early in life, you're in for a rough time no matter how "well" you do.
Honestly, I think I was happier when I crossed $500K than $5m because the possibilities once seemed endless.