Introduction

 Money often makes everything messier, At some level of extreme wealth, money corrupts. On the left and the right, it buys political power, it silences dissent, it serves primarily to crime ever-greater wealth, often unrelated to any same well being. For Mr. Scocca, that level is self-evidently somewhere around one billion dollars; beyond that, you’re irredeemable. Second stop on the tour everybody, and if you look around, nothing here should surprise you. You should listen to Mr. Scocca because he is a well-known billionaire that has issues himself with money and well being, I found this article on the New York Times Site which is a trusted

article/News site.

Physiological

The first stop on our tour bus is a big one. People underestimate the prevalence of impostor syndrome. Impostor syndrome is the failure to accept any accomplishments because y;ou feel as if you don’t deserve it. There’s quite a bit of that psychologically in how people feel about not feeling like you deserve anything and you keep to yourself a lot, people with this usually feel like they are a failure and they don't deserve it even if they worked especially hard to get a really good raise or their life savings got doubled.

Trust issues

People with lots of money usually have trust issues. If people are always being nice to you after you have just won the lottery or got a really good promotion and all of a sudden your friends and family and being like little angels around you, they are probably in it for the money which leads to serious trust issues and you start to feel alone and that you can’t trust anybody but not always do people want your money some people actually want to hang around you just because they are real friends

Money buys comfort & that’s it

There’s a baseline for happiness and research shows people don’t move beyond that. Money can provide comforts that make life easier and offer more attractive options, but beyond that, you are stuck with yourself. That’s one reason I don’t make a big deal about going somewhere for a vacation. I still have to deal with myself anywhere I go, money only buys you stuff that you want really not always what you need money buys you lots and lots of luxury and comfort but you don't really need all of that stuff it just makes you lazier and lazier and lazier until you treat people like their below you just because you have more money and put people down.

People don't think you deserve it

Have you ever heard of Justin Beiber you probably have and this person is a great example of you not deserving your new-found wealth Justin lives a jet-set lifestyle? He's been photographed living it up (and sometimes looking unhappy) all over the world, from London to Los Angeles to Panama to Hawaii and beyond. With an estimated net worth of $305 million, according to TheRichest, Justin is able to live an enviable lifestyle. He generally travels with an entourage. In his A-list world, it's all about luxury vacations, high-end sports cars, hypebeast clothes, and chartered planes. Justin lives large, but also uses some of his wealth to help others.