Santina brought us more vegetables when arriving to clean the house on Friday that we’ll be using tonight in our homemade taco salads (minus the shells). |
No, we didn’t win nor did we purchase any Powerball tickets, although Tom was an avid weekly player while we lived in Minnesota. I’d always shrugged, somewhat disinterested, having watched a few reality shows depicting how winning destroyed many people’s lives.
“Money is the root of all evil,” so they say. Without enough to survive, our lives are wrought with misery and sorrow. With the sudden acquisition of too much money, life may also be equally unhappy.
As we read the news story about the Powerball winner in Minnesota this week, who lives a mere 35 minutes from our former area, we wondered what would eventually become of this winner and other winners making the news this week. Would they wisely invest to secure their future or would they become like many past winners, bankrupt a few years later, after lavish wasteful spending?
Yesterday, Tom asked the question, “How would we change our current lives traveling the world if we won the Powerball with money suddenly to became no object?”
We chuckled over the prospect as many couples do, fantasizing over winning tens of millions of dollars. Yea, yea, yea, we’d give money to family, donate to our favorite charities, set up investments for our future. La la la. The usual.
But, the big question remains…would we continue in our travels? Our definitive answer is “yes,” with some changes, of course.
Zucchini we picked from our small garden on the patio. Soon we’ll have Pomodoro (tomatoes). |
Here’s our combined list of 10 factors we’d be inclined to change:
Tom
1. Flying: First Class airline tickets
2. Cruising: Select the best cabins and services or all-inclusive smaller luxury cruises.
3. Bring the family to visit more often
4. Buy all new clothes and personal items each time we’d arrive at a new location, to be donated when departing, carrying only our laptop bags with digital equipment. No checked luggage.
Jess (in addition to Tom’s above four items)
5. Ship favorite food items to our current location enabling me to cook more varied meals.
6. Pay the extra weight checked luggage fees without concern.
7. Hire a maid to clean, twice a week as opposed to once.
8. Maintain the availability of a driver with an air-conditioned roomy vehicle to transport us at any time, to locations of our choosing.
9. Maintain our budget while increasing spending in most categories.
10. Purchase clothing and personal effects online to be shipped to our current location.
To some degree, we are able to do a portion of the above, except for the opportunity to fly first class or cruising on $1000 per day/per person cruises.
However, reviewing the above list doesn’t leave us drooling over what we wish we could do differently.
When one has a massive amount of money, their “job” becomes managing it and ensuring that the professionals they’ve hired aren’t making bad decisions on their behalf. At that point, one would have a life consisting of “working.” We’re living this life we choose to avoid feeling as if we’re working. I wouldn’t change that for anything!