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In article <UzYON.154262$TSTa.122307@fx47.iad>,A lot more people think that, than actually follow through when they win the lottery (or other large windfall). It turns out to be surprisingly difficult to keep it a secret, surprisingly difficult psychologically to give most of the money away, and surprisingly difficult to live happily from a lump sum that you keep. People do fine when they win a large prize (I guess up to a few $100k) - they pay off their mortgage, buy a fancy car, take a nice holiday. But prizes of $10M and more usually cause a lot of trouble for the winner.
Scott Lurndal <slp53@pacbell.net> wrote:
...Think of all those lottery winners whose lives got totally screwed up byBy definition. Because the definition of "too much" implies having crossed>
into the zone of being a bad thing.
>
I would like to argue that there are things that there is no such thing as
too much of, but I can't think of any examples off hand.
Money?
money.
I'm of the opinion that if I did win the lottery (which I don't play, so
there's no chance of this happening), I'd keep a million or two to live on
(comfortably) and give the rest away (in one fell swoop) to some good
charity. I wouldn't tell anyone about it.
The hard part, in this day and age where everything is a scam, would beOne lottery winner managed this. When he won about £160M in the lottery, he bought his favourite football club (or "soccer club", for those who come from a country where "football" doesn't involve feet or round balls) and set it up as a trust owned by the club's fans.
finding an actually good/deserving charity.
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