• lobut@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    All that extra money seems to be a detriment. People seem to be less empathetic and just use that money to get more money.

    • GoodbyeBlueMonday@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      Reminds me of what Warren Zevon had to say about rich people problems, off Preludes. It came out a few years after his death, and the back half of the album has snippets from some radio interview(s?) he did. Neat musings by a complex dude: he was creative genius in a lot of ways, and a titanic asshole in a lot of other ways (he asked his ex-wife to write his biography, and to not go easy on him - alcoholism, violence, absentee parenting…it’s all there).

      Anyway, that’s a preface for the folks who don’t know about him: he probably could have been a bigger financial success had he not been a disaster of a human, but maybe his dirty life and times gave him enough material to feed his creativity…who knows.

      WZ: I was real lucky, because I always had some kind of work that came along - at the last minute, anyway.

      I was always able to make some kind of living as a musician

      I also never really got rich, and that might have been lucky too, ya know?

      Interviewer: in what way?

      WZ: Well, because the less time you spend with the issues of being rich

      they’re like the issues of being famous

      they’re not real issues

      so they’re not real life.

      Interviewer: And it leaves more time to be creative?

      WZ: There’s more of an exchange - a human exchange of ideas and feelings to be had on the bus stop than over the phone with your accountant, and if you’re rich you spend a lot of time on the phone with your accountant. it’s necessary, I believe.

      I know I’m happy and that means I must be lucky. That I know.

      EDIT: this is not to say I wouldn’t be grateful for more money, myself, but I chose the life of a biologist - in ecology and evolution, no less. I’m happy to make a living, and it’s always a little shocking to see folks make double/triple what I do and say it’s “not much these days”. Those of us scraping by have a wildly different perspective, and I’d love to give folks a tour of what it looks like long-term.