Wealth is excellent at preventing problems and reducing "bad days" (e.g., financial stress). However, it doesn't necessarily increase the frequency or intensity of "good days." Thinking of money like a vaccine—preventing disease—is more accurate than seeing it as a performance-enhancing drug for happiness.

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Your sense of financial well-being is not determined by your absolute wealth but by the equation: what you have minus what you want. A person with modest means who desires nothing more can be far happier than a billionaire who constantly strives for a higher net worth.

Wealth can be used to improve life (e.g., buying time) or to measure status. The former has a functional ceiling, after which people often pivot to the less fulfilling game of using money as a social scorecard.

A University of Pennsylvania study challenges the $75k happiness plateau, finding that for 80% of people, happiness rises with income up to $500k. Crucially, at higher income levels, the primary benefit is the avoidance of negative emotions and worries, providing security and peace of mind.

People mistakenly believe money solves deep-seated issues. In reality, financial freedom is just the entry ticket. It provides the time and resources to begin the difficult “assault course” of personal healing and becoming a functional human being.

More money acts as a multiplier for your existing emotional state. For a person who is already happy and content, wealth can enhance their life. However, for someone who is fundamentally unhappy or unfulfilled, more money will not solve their core problems and may even exacerbate their misery.

The depression of someone chasing wealth is often buffered by the hope that money will solve their problems. The true psychological danger comes *after* achieving financial success, when you realize your non-money problems persist. This can lead to a profound and debilitating sense of hopelessness.

People mistakenly chase happiness through spending, but happiness is a temporary emotion, like humor, that lasts only minutes. The more achievable and durable goal is contentment—a lasting state of being satisfied with what you have. Aligning spending to foster long-term contentment, rather than short-term happiness, is key to well-being.

Earning more money acts as a lever on your pre-existing emotional state. It can enhance the lives of already joyful people but will not resolve underlying depression or anxiety. Money is a tool for leverage, not a prescription for happiness itself.

The pursuit of wealth as a final goal leads to misery because money is only a tool. True satisfaction comes from engaging in meaningful work you would enjoy even if it failed. Prioritizing purpose over profit is essential, as wealth cannot buy self-respect or happiness.

Money is just one pillar of a happy life. Without physical health, mental well-being, and a spiritual purpose, wealth is meaningless. Financial fitness provides the fuel and freedom to enhance the other areas, but it cannot fix deficiencies in them.

Money Is a Vaccine Against Misery, Not a Prescription for Happiness | RiffOn