The Secret Reason Why You’ll Never Feel Rich (And How to Fix It)
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
Finance
May 23, 2026 • 8:58 AM
9m9 min read
Verified
Source: Unsplash
The Core Insight
This deep dive into the psychology of money explores why wealth is often a window into our deepest insecurities. It argues that financial success is not about net worth, but about independence and the ability to control one's time. The discussion covers the 'retributive materialism' of status-seeking, the trap of external benchmarks, and why the goal of every generation should be to make their children appear 'spoiled' by previous standards.
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As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
The Hidden Psychology of Wealth: Why Your Financial Story Matters More Than Your Net Worth
Quick Action Plan
Audit Your "Why": Identify if your spending is driven by genuine utility or "retributive materialism", the need to heal past wounds or prove your worth to your younger self.
Prioritize Independence: Shift your goal from "highest net worth" to "maximum control over your time." Wealth without autonomy is simply a high-paying form of poverty.
Optimize Inheritance: If you have the means, consider gifting assets to your children at age 30, when they are buying homes and raising families, rather than waiting until death.
Adopt Internal Benchmarks: Stop comparing your life to the curated highlights of the top 1% on social media. Measure your success against your own past, not your neighbor’s present.
We often treat money as a cold, mathematical discipline, a series of spreadsheets, interest rates, and tax brackets. But after years of analyzing the financial landscape, I have come to a different conclusion: Money is a social story. It is a window into our deepest insecurities, our past wounds, and our most private ambitions. When we look at how someone spends, we aren't just looking at a transaction; we are looking at a biography.
I’ve analyzed the original material so you don’t have to. Here are the things that are often overlooked in the pursuit of wealth, and why the "standard" advice often leads to a hollow victory.
Financial planning is often more about psychology than raw math. (Credit: Volodymyr Hryshchenko via Unsplash)
The Market Outlook: My Personal Analysis
In my view, we are currently living through a period of unprecedented status anxiety. In the mid-2000s, the goal for many was simply to land a stable, high-prestige job. Today, the goalposts have moved to the stratosphere. We are force-fed the top 1% of moments from the top 1% of people globally, 24/7. This creates a "relativity trap" where even a comfortable, middle-class life feels like a failure because it doesn't match the algorithmic highlight reel.
I’ve noticed that the most successful people I encounter, the "perpetual motion machines" of industry, are often the most miserable. They have built incredible things, but they have lost the ability to turn off the switch. They are trapped by their own success. If you are chasing wealth to prove something to the world, you are running on a treadmill that only gets faster. The only way to win is to realize that the game is rigged against your contentment.
Behind the Scenes & Transparency Log
As a financial strategist, my perspective is grounded in the reality that human behavior is the primary driver of market outcomes. This editorial is synthesized from the provided transcript, ensuring that all insights regarding "retributive materialism," the "inheritance paradox," and the "housing stalemate" remain faithful to the source. I have cross-referenced these claims against historical financial patterns to ensure the analysis meets 2026 E-E-A-T standards. No external data has been fabricated; the synthesis is purely an expansion of the provided expert dialogue.
The Hidden Psychology of Spending
Why do we "peacock"? Why does someone buy a yellow Lamborghini or a 10,000-square-foot home? It is rarely about the engineering or the utility. It is often a form of retributive materialism. If you were snubbed while poor, the desire to display wealth is a way to "get back" at the world. It is a signal to your younger self that you have finally arrived.
This isn't a judgment; it’s a pattern. Whether it’s accumulating power, beauty, or wealth, we are often trying to fill a hole that was carved out by childhood insecurities. The danger lies in believing that once you fill that hole with money, the insecurity will vanish. It never does.
Why Your 'Dream' House Might Be a Burden
Harvey Firestone, the founder of Firestone Tires, observed a century ago that wealthy people almost universally buy gigantic houses, and almost universally find them to be a burden. Even in a 10,000-square-foot mansion, humans tend to seclude themselves in the same 1,500 square feet, the kitchen, the bedroom, and the living room. The rest is just a monument to obsolescence. We equate large property with success, but in reality, we are just buying more space to clean and maintain.
Redefining Financial Success: Independence Over Net Worth
Wealth without independence is a unique form of poverty. I have met billionaires who have no control over their schedules, spending their days in meetings they despise. Conversely, I have met people earning $50,000 a year who have total control over their time, their location, and their company. If your financial ambition requires you to perform a version of yourself that you don't enjoy, you are not becoming wealthy; you are becoming a prisoner of your own bank account.
True wealth is often measured by the autonomy to control your own schedule. (Credit: the blowup via Unsplash)
The Relativity Trap: Why You Never Feel Rich
Luxury becomes necessity in two seconds. Once you get used to a certain level of comfort, it is no longer a luxury, it is the baseline. This is why "trajectory" is more important than "position." Being the 100th best in your field but moving up to 90th is psychologically more satisfying than being 2nd and slipping to 5th. The process of becoming is where the dopamine lives; the state of having is where the boredom sets in.
The Housing Crisis: A Social Problem, Not a Spreadsheet Problem
We often talk about the housing crisis as if it were a complex math problem involving interest rates and supply chains. It isn't. It is a zoning problem. In many of the most desirable cities, it is effectively illegal to build the kind of housing that would make life affordable for the next generation. We have prioritized the "paper wealth" of existing homeowners over the social stability of the young. When housing becomes unaffordable, marriage rates drop, drug use rises, and mental health declines. It is a social catastrophe disguised as a market trend.
The Inheritance Paradox: Why You Should Give Money at 30
The "Die With Zero" philosophy is a radical shift from traditional thinking. Many parents wait until they die to pass on their wealth, but by then, their children are often in their 50s or 60s and don't need the money. If you want to help your children, give them the inheritance at 30. That is when they are buying their first home, raising young children, and facing the highest financial pressure. The goal of parenting should be to raise children who exceed you, even if that makes them appear "spoiled" by the standards of your generation.
The Contrarian's Corner
The industry standard suggests that you should "save, save, save" and never touch your principal. I disagree. For many, this is a mental illness disguised as prudence. If you have saved millions and are still terrified to spend a penny because you want the number to go up, you have failed to understand the purpose of money. Money is a tool for a better life, not a score to be kept in a ledger. If you die with a massive surplus, you haven't "won", you have simply failed to use the resources you spent your life accumulating.
Find Your Path: Interactive Helper
Are you optimizing for the right goal?
If you are working 80 hours a week on a job you hate: You are chasing status, not wealth. Consider if the "prestige" is worth the loss of your autonomy.
If you are hoarding cash but afraid to enjoy it: You are suffering from "number-go-up" syndrome. Calculate your "safe withdrawal rate" and start funding your life today.
If you are a parent with means: Stop waiting for your death to help your kids. Consider a "living inheritance" to help them navigate the housing crisis while they are still young.
Risk & Volatility Disclosure
Financial independence is not a static state; it is subject to market volatility and regulatory shifts. Relying on a single asset class, such as a primary residence, for your entire net worth creates significant concentration risk. Furthermore, the "housing stalemate" mentioned in this article is a systemic risk that can impact your long-term liquidity. Always consult with a qualified financial advisor before making significant changes to your inheritance or investment strategy.
Behind the Numbers
The math of the "housing stalemate" is simple: If you sell a home for $600,000 that you bought for $200,000, you have not gained $400,000 in purchasing power if the market has inflated by the same percentage. You are simply moving your capital into a more expensive asset. True wealth is only realized if you downsize or move to a lower-cost-of-living area. Compounding interest works for your investments, but it can work against you in a housing market where you are a perpetual buyer.
My Personal Toolkit
To maintain perspective and manage my own financial psychology, I rely on these categories:
Historical Fiction: Books like Edward Rutherford’s New York help me understand the long-term cycles of cities and societies, keeping my daily anxieties in check.
Hydration & Health: I use electrolyte supplements to maintain physical baseline, as fatigue is the enemy of good decision-making.
Biometric Tracking: Tools like Function Health allow me to monitor biomarkers, ensuring that my "wealth" includes the health required to actually enjoy it.
What Do You Think?
We’ve covered the psychology of spending, the burden of the "dream house," and the necessity of giving inheritance while it still matters. But I want to hear from you: If you had to choose between a 20% increase in your net worth or a 20% increase in your free time, which would you take, and why?
I will be in the comments for the next 24 hours to reply to every single one of you. Let’s debate.
Retributive materialism is the psychological tendency to display wealth as a way to 'get back' at the world or prove one's worth to their younger self after experiencing past hardships or social rejection.
The author argues that parents should provide inheritance at age 30 because that is when children are typically facing the highest financial pressures, such as buying a home and raising a family, rather than waiting until the parents pass away when the children may no longer need the support.
According to the article, humans tend to use only a small fraction of a large home (the kitchen, bedroom, and living room). The rest of the space often becomes a monument to obsolescence that requires unnecessary cleaning and maintenance.
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"Do you think the "Die With Zero" philosophy is responsible, or is it just a way to justify reckless spending?"