You’d think striking it suddenly rich would be the ultimate ticket to freedom. Without money worries, the world would be your oyster. Perhaps you’d champion a worthy cause, or indulge a sporting passion, but work? Surely not. However, remaining gainfully employed after sudden wealth is more common than you’d think. After all, there are numerous high-profile billionaires who haven’t called it quits despite possessing the luxury to retire, including some of the world’s top chief executives, such as Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg.
But it turns out, the suddenly rich who aren’t running companies are also loathe to quit, even though they have plenty of money. That could be, in part, because the link between salary and job satisfaction is very weak.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 13 2016, @11:09AM
Dogbert: I finished ghostwriting your autobiography.
CEO: "I was ridiculously lucky. The End." I was hoping you'd include something about all of my hard work.
Dogbert: You didn't work any harder than your gardener, and he lives in his truck.
CEO: What about my vision and intuition?
Dogbert: My first draft had a chapter on your hallucinations and magical thinking. But I covered that ground with the title: "I'm A Delusional Sociopath And You Can Too."
CEO: I'm starting to regret paying you in advance.
Read more: http://dilbert.com/strip/2012-12-30 [dilbert.com]