When kids tried to pick on me, I always had one line to shoot them down with: 'I make more money in a week than you'll make in your entire life.' Which probably wasn't true, but they thought it was.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When I was a kid, my parents were always like, 'Money doesn't buy happiness.' I thought, 'You just didn't make enough money.' I had to go find it out for myself.
My kids paid the price for my career. We can say it's for our family, but it almost never is. It's about us. It's just some of us can pretend better than others.
My parents always taught me that my day job would never make me rich; it'd be my homework.
I make more money than I need, ever.
When I was a kid, maybe 11, I remember saying, 'When I grow up I wanna have enough money to buy a really cool car, because I won't.'
I make more money in a week than my father made in a year.
I remember once in junior high school, on a Friday, my mom came home from work and said to my brother and I, 'You know, between us, we have only 27 cents, but we have food in the refrigerator, we have our little garden out back, and we're happy, so we are rich.'
When vastly wealthy people say, 'I'm not leaving my kids any money,' it's typically not true.
Every year of my working life, I have been fortunate enough to earn more money than I have spent.
When you're a kid, you want to be a millionaire.
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