Money can bring freedom to some and enslave others. Depending on how a person relates to his capital, he may become a depressive paranoid or an optimist who will bring joy to everyone around him.
Instructions
Step 1
The concept of "a lot of money" is different for everyone. For some it is enough, doing what they love, to earn a calm and happy life for themselves and their children. For others, money is constantly not enough, and even if a tidy sum is on the account, they cannot calm down, and work almost around the clock, saving on everything. They save money for a big apartment or a better car, do not live, but live their lives instead of enjoying it here and now. After all, the well-being in the family does not depend on the brand of the car. For happiness, mutual understanding and support, as well as communication of relatives are important. But the careerists just do not have enough time for this.
Step 2
Some people, having earned a large amount of money for them, change for the better. They give gifts to loved ones, make their dreams come true. They help orphanages and hospitals, participate in charity events. They get pleasure not from the amount of money in the bank account, but from the emotions that come when you spend capital on good deeds.
Step 3
Others, on the contrary, become angrier and more aggressive with the increase in cash reserves. They get the impression that everyone around them is enemies who only want to take away their honestly earned money. Such people hide savings not only from strangers, but also from their own. They stop helping their relatives, even if they did it before. Their main argument is "I earn money by hard work, so let others work as well." This position is clear enough. It's just that a person has forgotten how to receive positive emotions from the joy of others, he can be satisfied only when the number of zeros in the bank account increases.
Step 4
Money comes first, and friends and relatives who cannot earn much become uninteresting, and sometimes even dangerous, as potential contenders for a piece of wealth. A person begins to avoid communicating with them, meeting only with those who earn as much as he or more. Simple human values - kindness, mutual understanding, compassion - are losing their meaning. Assessment of others is given based on the volume of their wallet, and not on the qualities of character. It is quite difficult to communicate with such people, so very often they remain alone.