All Content from Business Insider 10月09日 18:25
财富增长与友谊的挑战:一位百万富翁的孤独与连接
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一位白手起家的百万富翁分享了他在财富积累过程中遇到的孤独感,以及如何通过结识拥有相似财富背景的人群,找到了归属感和更深层次的友谊。文章探讨了财富增长可能带来的疏离感,尤其是在与原有社交圈沟通不畅时。作者通过加入专业社群,找到了能够理解他目标和关注点的人,从而克服了孤独,并认识到自己并非内向,而是找到了“同类”。这种经历强调了拥有相似价值观和人生经历的人群在建立有意义连接中的重要性。

💰 财富增长带来的孤独感:作者在成为百万富翁后,发现与原有社交圈的隔阂加深。由于成长背景和生活价值观的不同,他难以与朋友和同事分享自己的目标和关注点,感觉自己变得“不一样”,陷入一种“孤狼”状态。

🤝 寻找“同类”社群的重要性:作者通过加入房地产投资的“头脑风暴”小组、企业家组织(EO)和Vistage等社群,遇到了与他有相似财富水平和行业见解的人。在这些环境中,他第一次感到被理解,可以坦诚地讨论商业、金钱和个人成长,从而缓解了孤独感。

💡 价值观和经历的共鸣是建立深层友谊的关键:作者发现,与那些白手起家、经历过财富起伏的百万富翁建立联系,能带来一种独特的共鸣。这种共鸣并非源于炫耀,而是基于共同的语言和对风险、税务效率、代际财富等问题的共同关注,使得关系更加真诚和深入。

🚀 自我认知与社交需求的转变:通过与同类人的连接,作者意识到自己并非真正的内向者,而是之前未找到适合自己的社交圈。他学会了接受人与人之间的差异,不再强求不适合的关系,转而专注于与拥有相似价值观和追求的人建立更深厚的友谊,从而获得了内心的平静。

The author is a millionaire who struggled with friendships at first.

This essay is part of Lonely at the Top, a series that examines the link between wealth and loneliness.

I grew up in a modest household in Hawaii — first-gen, middle class. We were the kind of family where you're taught to save every penny and keep your head down. The kind where we never ordered soda on the rare occasion we actually went to a restaurant.

I followed those values into adulthood. I earned an engineering degree, landed a W-2 job, lived frugally, and saved hard.

By my late 20s, I'd bought my first rental property in Seattle. By 2015, I had 11 units and a growing net worth.

But here's what no one tells you when you cross that first million-dollar mark: It gets lonely. Not because of the money, but because you feel like you can't talk about it.

That is, until I met other millionaires, who opened a new social world for me.

Becoming a millionaire was alienating

Lane Kawaoka found his money to be alienating.

In my 20s, I was so focused on work and building my wealth that I isolated myself initially. I barely had a social life and considered myself an introvert.

But when my net worth grew into seven figures, it became even more difficult to connect with the few people who were still in my life. I was suddenly different. I felt like a ghost in my own life. I'd built financial traction, but I was a lone wolf. Everyone I knew was still on the 401(k) escalator.

My coworkers didn't understand things I found important. My old friends still saw debt as dangerous and opted to do 15-year mortgages rather than 30-year mortgages.

It wasn't because those people were less intelligent than I am; we were just concerned about different things.

I stopped talking about my goals because it sounded like I was bragging. Plus, still being frugal at the time, I didn't want any excuse for me to have to pick up the bill all the time for my buddies.

That was back in 2015.

I then met people of a similar wealth bracket

Lane Kawaoka became a millionaire through real estate investments.

The turning point came in 2016 when I joined a real estate mastermind, which is a group of investors who come together to connect. For the first time, I met people who spoke my language. They weren't impressed with how much I made because they made the same — or more. They just wanted to talk about the industry.

Groups like Entrepreneurs' Organization (EO) and Vistage gave me a starting point — structured, vetted environments where high performers could talk openly about business, money, and personal growth.

At one event, a person even wrote his net worth on his name tag. I realized he wasn't coming from a place of bragging. It was a way to be efficient and forthright — two things I value.

These people — many of them with seven- and eight-figure net worths — weren't arrogant or flashy. These weren't prodigies or geniuses. They were people who had lost money, made it back, learned lessons, and kept moving forward. Especially among first-generation wealth builders, I found a quiet humility. Once I got into the room, I realized they weren't any smarter; they were just more persistent.

More than anything, I felt relieved — relieved that I wasn't weird and relieved that I wasn't the only one thinking about tax efficiency, estate planning, and building multi-generational wealth in my 30s.

I even discovered something else: I wasn't introverted like I thought; I was just an extrovert who'd never found his tribe.

I still remember a dinner with a small group of fellow real estate investors. The conversation was fluid, deep, and energizing. No one held back. It was the first time I felt truly understood — and I didn't want the night to end.

Deeper friendships with like-minded people cured my loneliness

Lane Kawaoka now connects with other millioniares.

Even today, I rarely talk about business or money with my old friends or family — maybe I should. But I don't have to anymore because I've built a curated circle of people who get it.

That shift gives me peace.

I no longer feel the need to over-explain or downplay my goals. I no longer try to force old relationships to grow into spaces they were never meant to occupy. I also stopped forcing relationships with people who don't have the same values and aren't taking risks. Learning and accepting that we just won't connect has helped me immensely.

Instead, I started building deeper relationships with other first-gen millionaires who had walked a similar path.

Strangely enough, self-made net worth tends to be a good filter for connection. It's not about flaunting it; it's just a helpful signal. Because when you meet someone else who's built it from scratch, you tend to speak the same language — even before you say a word.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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百万富翁 孤独 友谊 财富积累 社交圈 社群 价值观 同类 Millionaire Loneliness Friendship Wealth Accumulation Social Circle Community Values Tribe
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