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by gonehome 2145 days ago
> “ I left a Silicon Valley FAANG for another country more than five years ago, even though I was making ~3x there compared to what I made in the new place.”

This is kind of what the comment you’re replying to was suggesting. Take advantage of the high income first before moving.

> “You can make money anytime.”

Sure, but interest compounds - money earlier is way more helpful than money later.

I always wonder a little about the family wealth of people that write things like this. Most of the people I know who left high paying jobs come from wealthy families and they’re already basically working for fun.

I didn’t grow up poor by any means, but I also don’t come from family wealth. If I want to have a family of my own, and make sure we will always have a place to live, saving high salary (and equity) in order to reach financial independence is worth it.

If you don’t want a family or you come from wealth then prioritizing other stuff is probably fine. If you do want these things though, I think it’s helpful to be more forward looking until reaching financial independence.

> “Not the life I wanted.”

Totally reasonable, but what people want over their life changes. Financial independence gives you freedom to be able to change too.

2 comments

> I always wonder a little about the family wealth of people that write things like this. Most of the people I know who left high paying jobs come from wealthy families and they’re already basically working for fun.

Seriously, these replies that turn securing a future for you and your family into some kind of avarice anti-virtue are ridiculous.

As per the OP, the Quality Migrants visa becomes harder to obtain once you reach 30. Japan wants young talent to replace their aging workforce so youth is valued and considered. Grinding in the valley could have caused him to lose the chance to move to Japan completely.