It is important to make a distinction between wealth and income...
This is a hugely important distinction, but people dislike thinking about it because the implications are disturbing to many. The idea that you can earn, say, $150k pa and still be poor is disconcerting to some but lots of people in that income level have pretty low net asset values in the grand scheme of things.
Interestingly, most
corporations run on this model of high income but minimising actual wealth (think about the way the stock market works in terms of stock price to underlying value). It's OK for them to use this model, because their purpose is not to be wealthy, but to deliver value and wealth for their owners (the shareholders).
But once you extrapolate this principle to individuals, you quickly realise that the purpose of most people in a capitalist economy is not to be wealthy, but merely to be rewarded by a variable, if occasionally high, income level. And in the process, deliver value and wealth for their "owners".
But high income levels on their own are fairly meaningless for quality of life without wealth, unless they're high enough to deliver wealth. And you need at least high six-figure salaries for an extended period of time to deliver actual wealth. People don't like the idea that a moderately high income level doesn't give you financial freedom. You have luxury at this level, but not freedom. They're just gilded chains.
A mil in the bank does very little for your financial freedom if you want a good lifestyle. 2 mil makes a difference, enough to deliver a free (but rather modest) lifestyle. You need more than 5-10 mil to have both freedom and generous luxury. Freedom and
world class luxury requires hundreds of millions.
"... the price per paper clip. We pick that rabbit out of the hat while everybody sits out there wondering how the hell we did it."
I happen to think you control your own life.
One thing you'll hopefully learn with a bit more experience is that this is absolutely true, but absolutely not in the way you currently believe. Good luck.