I roll my eyes whenever I read about people who've won big on Lotto vowing that nothing will change, that they'll stay in their modest home and keep their high-mileage vehicle despite their vastly changed financial situation. As if.
It must be part of the human condition. We kid ourselves that the choices we make in life are driven by our fine taste and discernment. We tell ourselves that we love this house, we love this car, we love staying at dingy motels, we love buying home brand cheese and we love clipping supermarket coupons. But who are we fooling? The depressing truth is that our purchases and lifestyle choices are driven largely by the size of our bank balance. We wish it wasn't true.
Sure enough, down the track when it's reported that the freshly minted multi-millionaires have bought a mansion, a couple of fancy cars and a first class around-the-world airfare, I'm like, 'I-told-you-so'. You see, they mistook their contentment with their standard of living as a sign that they're people of simple tastes unaffected by rampant consumerism, salt-of-the-earth folk unimpressed by the baubles of great wealth. They thought they were satisfied with their lot in life but discovered they were in fact resigned to their circumstances.
So while I like to think I have most winners pegged, our $26-million man had me fooled when I saw him interviewed by John Campbell. Trevor (like Madonna and Beyoncé, known only by his first name) from Te Kauwhata (population 1200) vowed he would start his 5am shift at a supermarket checkout just like normal despite the fact he could now earn a conservative $750,000 annually just from interest.
I probably believed him because Trevor was perfect and his story was perfect. Rags-to-riches narratives have long fuelled fairytales, literature, theatre and film. And this was our very own story. Of course we were fascinated. Nora Ephron couldn't have scripted it better.