anything goes with emma chamberlain - does money buy happiness?
Episode Date: December 1, 2022today we're going to talk about the age-old question: does money buy happiness. now i know you might be thinking, 'okay, emma, you're talking about something that you've kind of experienced.' i mean..., i'm no billionaire, but i have made money in a way that i didn't know was possible. however, i don't really relate to a lot of people with money, since i still live a pretty normal life: i do my own dishes, i go grocery shopping, i wipe my cats butts, you know, normal things...all that's to say, i think i have perspective. i also did not grow up rich. i was fine, i always had everything i needed, but i was always comparing myself to my friends who were rich... it made me feel bad about myself because i didn't grow up with a lot of money. i used to think that if i got rich, i would be magically happier. so now that i've been on both sides, i want to talk about it...does money actually buy happiness? let's see. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, I took a nap today at 3pm and ever since then I've felt weird.
Like it's 10pm right now.
This is normally my bedtime.
I'm up and I feel exhausted but I also feel full of energy.
So it is what it is.
I feel weird. Am I gonna be able to discuss a topic today
in a way that is seamless,
in smooth and cohesive?
I don't know, but we're gonna find out together.
And what are we gonna talk about today?
Today we're talking about the age old question.
Does money buy happiness?
Now I know you might be thinking, okay Emma, the age old question. Does money buy happiness?
Now I know you might be thinking, okay Emma,
you're talking about something that you've kind of experienced.
I'm not a fucking billionaire,
but I've been really fortunate to have made money
in a way that I just didn't even know possible.
And so it might be weird a little bit
in the way that I'm sort of talking about this,
almost as if I haven't experienced it,
but I think that in a way I have to
because that's sort of the way I actually look at it.
I don't really relate in all ways to the way that people in my industry
in particular live their lives. I don't relate completely. Maybe in some ways, sure, but not
in all ways. I still feel like I have normal fucking experiences.
You know, I don't have an assistant doing my dishes for me
and wiping my cat's ass every time it poops
and I do my own grocery shopping.
Like you see what I'm saying?
So it's like I'm in this weird spot.
I don't know whatever. Let's just keep going. I'm saying, so it's like I'm in this weird spot.
I don't know whatever.
Let's just keep going.
My opinion on this has changed throughout my life.
When I was younger, ages zero to 15,
my answer would have been yes,
because I struggled a lot growing up,
not feeling adequate or important or special because I
didn't come from money. And I've actually made an episode about this before, probably years ago now,
about how upset I was growing up that I wasn't a rich kid. And I was fine by the way.
You know, I always had everything I needed.
I had a roof over my head, food to eat,
gifts on Christmas and my birthday,
clothes to wear, things that I needed for school.
I was, I had an incredible childhood,
but I was always comparing myself to the rich kids at school,
and it made me feel bad about myself.
And I felt angry and resentful because their lives seemed so much easier and better and
more beautiful than mine.
Even though my life was incredible, I had nothing to complain about. I was doing just fine, but I still felt
bad because I didn't grow up with a lot of money. And so if you would have asked me in my youth,
if I think money can buy happiness, I would have said yes, because I looked at all of my friends that had a bunch
of nice things and their parents drove a nice car and they had a nice house that was big
and they had multiple bathrooms in their house and their refrigerator made ice cubes, you
know, and I was like, you're definitely happier than me. And so at that time, I believed that money did buy happiness, and I was like, ugh, you're definitely happier than me.
And so at that time, I believed that money did by happiness
because when I was comparing myself to my wealthier friends,
I saw their lives as perfect and flawless and easy
and they never experienced wanting something
or not being able to do something,
but then I got older and I started to make
my own money. And in the beginning when I started to make my own money, I was like, oh
shit, like this is amazing. And in a lot of ways, it did buy me happiness. Because for
me, my independence as a young person was very important to me.
You know, I wanted to move out when I was 17 and when I started to make my own money at 17,
that gave me the ability to move out. And that's a really cool thing. I'm very grateful for that.
And at the time, I was very grateful for that. And that made me happy because I didn't feel comfortable living in my parents
home because it was just tight, you know what I mean? It was small. It was very intimate.
I lived in close quarters with my parents and that was challenging for me. Once I started
working instead of going to school and I was working from home as a 16 and 17 year old.
I was just at home with my parents all the time. So yeah, I did make me happy to be
able to move out and to do that financially myself. So I would say that did
buy me happiness. And also when I first started making money, the ability to buy
clothes more often was something that genuinely made me happy because I have always loved clothes.
And being able to buy things that I have always dreamed of owning that was incredible and did make me kind of happy a little bit you know being able to buy food whatever kind of food I wanted and feed myself.
So I think that when I first started making money for the first time in my life,
and I had a little bit more financial freedom, I was relying on my parents,
and I was very fortunate to be able to support myself properly.
That made me really happy. And so I think that that experience in the beginning
further solidified my belief that money can buy happiness.
But as the years have gone by and I've gotten older,
I've learned a lot about life, you know, and I've continued to make money.
I've started to realize that at a certain point, money can't buy happiness anymore.
Money can buy happiness, yes, but only to a certain point and past that point, it doesn't do it anymore.
And the point in which money can still buy happiness is not the point that you may think
it is.
I mean, listen, I think this statement, money can't buy happiness, is ignoring so much
about reality.
If you can't properly feed yourself or clothe yourself
or shelter yourself, then of course money can buy happiness.
Because not having the bare minimum resources
that you need to survive will most definitely make you unhappy.
And so if somebody was experiencing a challenging time and they couldn't properly feed themselves
or clothe themselves or shelter themselves, then money would make their lives so much better.
Their quality of life, if they could have access to those things through money,
because that's how you get food
in clothing and shelter, they would be happier.
So when someone says money can't buy happiness,
they're completely ignoring that type of experience,
which is a very real experience.
But even if you have the money
to provide yourself with the things you need to survive,
a little bit more money than that can still provide a little bit of happiness.
The ability to spend money on some things just for a smile should not be ignored either.
You know, some small things that cost money that can bring you happiness might be gifts for people that you care about.
Maybe a gift for yourself if you accomplish something big,
home decor to make your home feel personal to you.
New clothes every once in a while for a fancy event or a wedding or a birthday party or prom or something like that.
Or even fun activities like going to the movies
with your friends or signing up for in art class like I don't know those things can all
bring you happiness and they do cost money. So again, the statement money can't buy happiness
is completely ignoring these types of incredible things that cost money.
But I think that the statement,
money can't buy happiness, comes true.
Once you surpass your needs as a human being
and your rational wants,
that's when money starts to cause problems.
I think your human needs are pretty obvious.
As I mentioned earlier, food, clothing, shelter,
clean water, your human needs that you need to survive.
And your rational wants are things like,
again, like I mentioned earlier, gifts, home decor,
a fun new piece of clothing, fun activities,
maybe a home that you think is beautiful.
You know, if you wanna live in a beautiful place,
it doesn't need to be big or anything,
but like a beautiful home that you appreciate
and are proud of, et cetera.
Like nothing crazy, not a fucking private jet
or a yacht, like that's an irrational want or desire, right?
That's not necessary.
It's a whole other level.
I think there is a sweet spot when it comes to wealth.
And the reason why I wanted to talk about this so much today
is because I think most people, and even me growing up,
assumed that it was the more the
merrier the more money you have the merrier.
No questions asked.
No questions asked.
But that's only something that makes sense in a theoretical world.
In the real world, it doesn't make sense because it's not like you just acquire incredible
amounts of wealth and it just pops
into your bank account one day.
There's always a reason why you have that wealth.
And what I've noticed is that most of the ways that you acquire extreme wealth are not
the most supportive of a happy lifestyle, whether it's the job itself or it's the way you acquired it in itself, or it's
the side effects of having extreme wealth.
The point of today's episode is to discuss why looking at mega rich celebrities in billionaire
entrepreneurs and all this stuff might just be a waste of time and a waste of energy striving for the most wealth that you could possibly acquire is not the
right way to look at the world I don't think because I think that instead the
mindset should be what is going to allow me to have the happiest life possible? That should be my goal.
My goal is to have a happy life,
not a happy and rich life,
because so many people are obsessed
with getting really rich one day.
Even me, I even kinda had that a little bit growing up.
I was like, come on, but I just don't think
that that's the right mindset.
So let's dig into it a little bit.
So I think that there's sort of a, there's a diagram in my mind.
Okay, I can't describe a diagram.
So we're just going to move on.
Literally, I'm like, I can't describe a diagram.
I don't know how to describe it.
So we're just going to have to move on.
So most people look at very
wealthy people in our like, that seems incredible. It seems so easy, so fun, stress free. They
have access to anything that they want at their fingertips. And life is perfect. Now, is some of that true?
Absolutely.
But is it all sunshine and rainbows?
I don't think so.
I sort of have this belief that everything is sort of a yin and yang in life.
You know, there's sort of a balance to the way that things just happen in the world.
It's like the universe wants to make everything even and balanced.
So in the case of somebody being extremely wealthy, yeah, they might have all these benefits.
They can go on crazy vacations. They can access whatever they want at any time. You know,
they can have anything that they want. But it also comes with extreme challenges.
The extreme benefits come with extreme challenges.
That's the yin and yang of it all.
I think that the way that most people acquire extreme wealth,
it usually comes at a price.
I mean, let's start with people who acquire
all their wealth from their family.
So they never worked a fucking minute for that money,
but now they have it.
They were just born rich.
They never have to work a day in their lives
because their grandpa created the doorknob
and now they're just set, okay?
And their first car was a fucking Porsche Cayenne,
Matt Black, Porsche Cayenne with the tinted windows,
first car, pulling up to junior year and that,
just because their grandpa created the doorknob.
We're talking about someone like that, okay?
Now it's not their fault,
it's not their fault that they were born into money,
but at the same time, it's not our fault as people who weren't born
into that experience to kind of hate them a little bit and be envious of them. The shitty
thing about being born with wealth is that you as an individual who are born into wealth
don't feel like you deserve that money. Deep down because deep down, you know that you just got fucking lucky. And that adds some pressure in life. Maybe it adds pressure to succeed 10 times more
than you would have felt the need to if you were born into a normal, you know, middle class family.
Right. You feel this pressure to go above and beyond. You may also feel the pressure to prove yourself
as a person, prove yourself to be valuable to others,
because number one, a lot of people
might already kind of hate you a little bit,
just deep down because they're jealous, right?
So now you have to work twice as hard
to gain the likeness of other people,
because everyone is just a little angry at you just by nature.
That sucks. So not only do you feel like you don't deserve it, but now you have all these added pressures,
but it can also be depressing because it's like when everyone else is grinding at school,
trying to get into a good college so that they can get a good job to make money,
or they're trying to figure out what their passion is so that they can turn a good job to make money. Or they're trying to figure out what their passion is
so that they can turn that into a way to make money.
Or they're going out and learning how to do electrical work
with their dad because one day they want to be an electrician.
Like, no matter, while everyone else is working
on their careers, someone who's born with money
might find themselves a little bit more confused
because there's
not this fire under their ass to go make shit happen in their lives.
They already have everything that they need.
So it's a lot harder to sort of inspire yourself to go and do something that means something
to you at a young age when you were born into money.
So that's a handful of challenges there. And I'm not saying that that happens with everybody.
I'm just saying that those are some challenges that people run into who are born with a lot of money.
But let's say you are an extremely wealthy person and you did it all yourself.
You weren't born into money and you did it all yourself. You weren't born into money.
You made this money yourself.
Well, I think to a certain point, that can be very satisfying.
But there have been many times when this has gone bad for people because a lot of people
can lose sight of their initial goal and dream to succeed in a certain career path, right?
That was their initial goal.
And usually for most people, their dream career wise also sort of goes hand in hand with
a dream to help people.
I feel like with most jobs, there's a desire to succeed so that you can also help people.
It's like I want to succeed in this so that I can support myself, but also so that I can
help people.
An example would be entrepreneurs, you know, who are working on creating a product that
will make people's lives better.
Maybe that's in a small way, maybe that's in a big way, but creating a product that will improve someone's life,
or opening up a restaurant that people can have memories at.
People can throw their birthday party there
and have a beautiful memory there.
I think most people start their career
with a desire to also help people in that career.
But a lot of times when people find financial success, they start to lose that vision.
And it becomes about making more money.
And then things can go sour.
You might start taking advantage of your customers to make more money.
You might start taking advantage of your employees to make more money.
You might start cutting corners, lying to people, taking advantage of people to make more money. You might start taking advantage of your employees to make more money. You might start cutting corners, lying to people, taking advantage of people to make more money. You might
feel more pressure to innovate and impress society and people you know and whatever. And so you might
steal ideas from other people. And none of that feels good. If you get caught up in the hamster wheel of trying to become the most wealthy you possibly
can be, there's a really good chance that along the way you might burn someone.
You might hurt someone.
And that doesn't make anyone feel good.
I'm sorry.
I don't care.
If you do things the wrong way, you will feel like shit.
Deep down. So yeah, you
know, there are some people who have managed to become wealthy and keep their morals in
check and, you know, whatever. It's possible, but it's pretty fucking rare. So a lot of times
the wealth that we look up to and that we envy, whether it's looking at wealthy
families that have had money for generations or it's somebody who just struck it rich
and made the right moves and is now a billionaire or even a business savvy motherfucker who struck
it rich and is killing it.
There's a decent chance that the way that they acquired that money wasn't 100% purely earned in a way.
Whether that's through cutting corners or through never working a day in your life and acquiring that type of money.
The other way that you can acquire extreme wealth
is by being a celebrity.
Actor, singer, apparently nowadays, YouTuber,
TikTok or podcast, or you know what I mean?
A celebrity of some sort, right?
I would say that can be pretty awful.
It can be great, but it can also be pretty awful, because being famous is challenging.
And I've made many episodes about challenges of being a famous person,
so I won't fully get into it right now. But being famous is definitely not all sunshine,
rainbows, and butterflies. Okay. The lack of privacy, the fear of public opinion,
the harassment, the possible harassment, all of that is what makes being a
celebrity the most difficult. And I look at somebody who's super famous, like, I
don't know, I always use Kim Kardashian as an example.
We'll use Kim, okay.
Like Kim Kardashian, can she go to Whole Foods and just walk down the aisles and just look
at the new snacks that are on the shelf?
No, because they'll be paparazzi outside and people are going to be just like, whoa, it's
Kim, you know, and she won't be able to just blend
into the grocery store. And that can be challenging. It can be isolating. So again, whether it's
a kid who was born into money, an entrepreneur who got caught in the hamster wheel of trying to
become as wealthy as possible, and somehow became a billionaire or something, or it's a celebrity who has flashy cars
and wears expensive clothes and whatever.
It's not as perfect as it looks.
These people have a really hard time trusting anyone.
People wanna be friends with them for all the wrong reasons.
They wanna go on the Bahamas trip in the private jet
with you, they don't actually care about you.
They want to go on a shopping spree with you
and then say, oh, fuck it, forgot my credit card.
Oh my God, wait, but I need this.
Can you just get it for me, I'll Venmo you.
Never Venmo's.
You know, even their family might start coming out
of the woodwork and being like,
well, can I have a check?
That sucks. That sucks.
That sucks.
Feeling like everyone around you wants something
from you is so incredibly isolating.
And I know it might sound ridiculous.
It's like, if you have that much money,
you can just fucking buy a robot and make that your friend.
Sure, but we need to have people around us in our lives that have our best
interest in mind and that care about us for us and who want to hang out with us for
us. Because without that, life is shitty. Okay. We need that. And for, you know, people who we look up to who have all this money, they have the hardest time finding that.
The other thing I've noticed is people who have a lot of money stop doing human things.
Okay, like, for example, instead of going to a doctor's appointment, a lot of people who are super wealthy will have
the doctor come to them, or a lot of super wealthy people have never done their own dishes.
They have someone coming in every day doing their dishes, maybe even cooking for them, cleaning
for them, doing all that stuff. Super wealthy people don't run their own errands.
You know, they're not going to the dry cleaner to drop off a cashmere sweater
that they don't want to put in the washing machine.
No, no, no.
They're not doing that.
One of their assistants are doing that for them.
But can I tell you, that's not a good thing.
It's not.
Some of my most magical moments throughout my day
are the tiny little moments going to the
dry cleaners and dropping off something going into the nail salon and getting my
nails done in this salon experiencing that experience going to the doctor's
office and then going and getting lunch and coffee by myself after and eating it in
the car. Oh delicious like those are things that are so enjoyable.
Going to whole foods and doing my own grocery shopping,
waking up in the morning and taking everything out
of the dishwasher and putting it away
and then cleaning the litter box,
like those little things are really enjoyable for me.
And a lot of people who have a lot of money
give all those responsibilities away.
And they just say, bye bye, those are not my,
that's not my shit anymore.
But those things keep you grounded.
They keep you grounded in reality.
When you start giving away those responsibilities,
I feel like you lose your human spirit.
And that's not good.
I think a lot of these people also become depressed in a way,
because I think once you hit a certain point of wealth,
there's kind of not much farther that you can go.
Like look at somebody like Jeff Bezos, okay.
The guy who started Amazon.
Okay, he's up there.
He's one of the most rich people.
What does he have to strive for anymore? He has everything. I mean, even on a smaller scale, I experienced a level of,
and this is just like is the most weird thing for me to talk about because it just sounds
kind of awful, but I'm going gonna try my best to just explain this
in the best way I can.
But when I made a certain amount of money,
much less than Jeff Bezos, by the way,
for fuck's sake, but much less.
I mean, like, you know, a lot, a lot less,
but I had a point where I felt sort of depressed
in a way, because I was like, okay, wait, I've made enough money now where now all the things that I've always really wanted I can have.
And they're not anything too special. I think the biggest thing for me was having a house that I love
that is very personal to me and that I'm proud of because growing up, that was something I struggled with growing up.
I had a hard time inviting my friends over and stuff because a lot of my friends, all of my friends growing up,
all of them lived in larger houses than me.
And I was embarrassed that I lived in the smallest home.
I lived in an apartment with my mom and my friends all lived in houses that were multiple bathrooms,
whatever.
I was always embarrassed to invite people over to my mom's apartment because I was like,
Zizna is cool as what they're used to and I was embarrassed.
So that was the biggest thing for me.
I was like, I want to be able to have a home that I'm really proud of. And once I accomplished that, I was like,
I don't, there's nothing else I really care about beyond that.
I don't want to go any, I don't need to go any further
than that.
Like I've hit a point where I'm done.
I have no desire at this point in my life
to acquire more money.
I don't, nothing I do anymore has anything to do with money really because, yes, it helps
of course in making a decision in some ways, but I think that I'm at a point now where
I'm happy where I'm at.
I don't need to make another penny.
I'm fine.
I don't need to make shit more fancy.
Like, I'm very happy with the way things are.
But I had a moment where I felt really depressed about that
because I felt like I had nothing left to work towards in a way.
And don't get me wrong, that is a fucking fortunate place to be in.
But it's weird because even though it is such a fortunate place to be in,
I immediately felt myself feeling nostalgic
about times when I did have shit I was working for.
What an exciting time that was for me.
What an invigorating time that was.
The grass is always greener, I think.
I've come to a place now where my dreams and desires just have nothing to do with money
or fame or anything at all. So I've found purpose again in my life, I would say. And that sort of
depression is gone because I've completely shifted my priorities and my dreams and my goals
to things that are extremely personal.
But a lot of the people that we look at,
on the internet who are extremely wealthy,
they might struggle with a weird level of depression
because it's hard to motivate
when you don't need to motivate.
When you're working towards a goal
because you need to get shit done to survive
You're motivated, you know what I mean?
It still might be tough sometimes to motivate but you're you still got a fire under your ass
The people who are wealthy don't have as much
It's also challenging because a lot of people start to feel like their identity is being wealthy. And that can cause a lot of anxiety because
what happens if it all goes away?
What happens if it all goes away?
Then what's your identity?
That is something that I think these people run into as well.
And last but not least, I think the more money you acquire,
the less you pay attention to the small things. You know, when I was younger, and
I didn't have money, like a lot of money, I appreciated the small things in a way that
I didn't even realize at the time when it's so easy to lose sight of the small things.
When you're surrounded by abundance, it's so tempting to buy moments rather than to create
really meaningful ones naturally. For example, it's so easy to go to a really expensive restaurant
with all your friends and have a super fancy dinner or something. But what might have been an even more fun experience is like going to like a cheap
local spot that you love and getting a fucking slice of pizza with your friends. You know what
I'm saying? But it's so much, it's so tempting to go and do the fancy shit all the time. When
the simpler things, the smaller things, the less fancy things, are a lot of times just as magical
if not even more, but it's so easy to just buy experiences. Do you know what I'm saying?
Like, when you go to an expensive restaurant and have dinner, that could be a great experience.
Don't get me wrong. Okay, that can be a really cool experience.
But when you start doing it all the time,
it starts to lose its shimmer and its shine.
And you're just doing it because you have the money to do it.
And a lot of times when you're going to a fancy restaurant,
you are, you're buying that experience.
You're paying for that experience.
Whereas when you go to a cheap pizza shop
and get a slice of pizza with your friends,
you're not buying that experience.
You're experiencing that experience.
You're going in there, maybe you know the person
who works in there, you're wearing your sweat pants.
It's like 11 p.m.
You know, you hang out outside on the curb
with your friends for two hours and talk,
that's like an experience that money can't even
fucking buy.
Do you see what I'm saying?
Okay, I'm losing it.
Well, it is 11 PM now, you know, it's like,
that's why I'm losing it because it's so late now
in the evening for me.
And I'm not normally awake at this time.
So now I'm not, I'm acting weird. I'm rambling on, I don evening for me. And I'm not normally awake at this time. So now I'm acting weird.
I'm rambling on.
I don't even know if what I'm saying makes sense.
I really hope it does.
Here's what I think the perfect recipe is in life.
The perfect recipe is to have enough money to live comfortably.
Maybe even enough money to have a little more than that. But making your
priority, living an enjoyable life, a happy life, and sometimes living a happy life means
having a certain amount of money. But it's not as much as you think. Again, I think that
society has it all wrong. We're all like, okay, the goal is in this life to make as much money as I possibly can because
That is what will make me the happiest. You know, that's what will provide me the happiest life that I could possibly have.
Now, that's kind of true in some ways, but it's not completely true. Instead, the way that we think about it
should be I wanna have the happiest life
that I can possibly have.
And that might require X amount of money,
but it doesn't require being a fucking billionaire.
It might not even require being a millionaire.
I'll use my dad as an example.
My dad is a very happy man.
And he's a happy man because he does what he loves every day,
which is painting.
He paints paintings and he loves that.
You know, he loves that.
Does that make him a lot of money?
No, not at all.
But it makes him happy to do that and it also makes him happy because
painting for him is a perfect job because he can make
money from
Creating art that he's passionate about
But he also, you know, has the freedom to create his own schedule. So he might not be
also has the freedom to create his own schedule. So he might not be riding around in a Rolls Royce
on the weekends, okay, but he can go surfing every day
if he wants, because he is his own boss,
and that's what he loves to do.
So you see what I'm saying?
My dad is such a great example of this.
He made his goal to live a happy life. And so for him, that looks the way I
just described. It's not, he is less concerned about making money and he's more concerned about
just creating a life that makes sense for him, that makes him happy. And I think that that's the goal that we should have to figure out the
perfect formula for our own happy life and not just focus on where the money comes in.
You know, like, let's just make as much money as we possibly can. I don't think so. To
a certain point, maybe so, but there's a bigger picture going on. Anyway, I need to go to bed
now because now, now it's getting bad. It's like it's 11 p.m. I need to go to bed now because now now it's getting bad.
It's like it's 11 p.m. I need to go to bed. I need to wrap this up. The moral of the story
is money can buy happiness, but only sometimes. Anyway, as always, let me know what you think.
Do you agree? Do you disagree? Am I out of touch? When I talk about some of these things, please let me know.
Twitter is at AG Podcast. Instagram is at anything goes.
I appreciate you guys so much for listening and hanging out with me.
It's always a pleasure. You guys are the best.
And I'll talk to you next week, I guess.
All right. Bye.
next week, I guess.
All right, bye.