Why Saving More Never Made Me Feel Safe — Even When I Had Enough

English Essays

Relocation: Choices and Reflections — Part 4 (Spinoff)

I used to believe that if I saved enough, I’d finally be free.


Saving Because Someone Said To

In my twenties, I saved money because a senior colleague told me to.

If I’m honest, it wasn’t really my own intention. It was more that I accepted it as something one simply did.

The numbers in my account grew slowly and steadily. But what I actually wanted to do with that money stayed vague for a long time.


The Money I Couldn’t Decide What to Do With

At some point I started thinking: shouldn’t I be doing something with all this?

Buy a car, maybe. Buy a place to live. I looked at properties for a while, toured a few apartments. Nothing clicked.

And then I came across insurance products — the kind that accumulate value over time.

Better than letting it sit in a low-interest account, I was told. That framing made sense to me, so I went along with it.

Around that same time, a health scare made me more aware of the future in a concrete way, and I signed up without much further deliberation.

Looking back, the decision seemed rational on the surface. But somewhere in it, I think I was also avoiding the harder work of deciding for myself what I actually wanted.


A Discomfort I Couldn’t Quite Name

Around that time, a vague unease began to settle in.

A quiet thought began to settle in: if I kept going like this, I would spend my whole life working — carrying a low-grade dissatisfaction that never quite resolved itself.

I couldn’t have put it so clearly then, but there was a real anxiety in work that had no visible end.


Shifting Toward Something More Intentional

Gradually, my thinking changed.

Not just saving — but building: maintaining an emergency fund, and putting the rest to work. Low-cost index funds, NISA, iDeCo. The idea that money could earn, so that future freedom became possible.

I made one rule for myself, though. One thing I would not cut:

Travel.

Travel was fuel. Without it, I wouldn’t have lasted. Eliminating it would have broken something in me eventually. So I thought about where money goes just as carefully as I thought about how to grow it.


Growing Assets, Growing Anxiety

And then something strange happened.

The more my assets grew, the less reassured I felt. Instead of relief, what arrived was: it’s still not enough.

Without quite deciding to, I had built a benchmark in my mind — a level at which investment returns alone would cover my living expenses with room to spare. A line past which I’d be free to travel, to live without constraint, to stop.

And until I reached it, I told myself, I couldn’t quit.


The Anxiety Numbers Can’t Solve

Now, looking back, I understand what was happening.

The benchmark was rational enough as a calculation. But it was never going to dissolve the anxiety. If anything, it made things worse.

Because naming a target means constantly measuring yourself against it. It means watching the gap. And the gap — even as it narrows — has a way of feeling permanent.

Growing. Still not enough. Moving forward. Still not enough.

That feeling pulled at me quietly, steadily, for a long time.


The Thing That Actually Made the Decision

In the end, my conclusion was simple.

The problem was never the amount of money.

No matter how much effort I put in, there was no guarantee it would be recognized fairly. Some environments treat people in ways that simply don’t make sense — where contribution and reward bear little relationship to each other.

Living inside that reality, something finally became clear: continuing to work in this environment is costing me something I can’t afford to keep losing.


The Decision to Leave

Once I saw it that way, the question changed.

It was no longer how much do I need before I can quit?

It became: is it okay to keep going like this?

And the answer was no. So I resigned.

There was still fear. I won’t pretend otherwise.

But one thing I can say honestly: having built up a certain level of assets made that decision easier to step toward. Not because the money gave me freedom — it didn’t, not exactly. But it gave me what I’d call permission to choose. A margin. A sense that this was a decision I was allowed to make.


What Was on the Other Side of the Number

The future I once imagined — where enough savings would finally bring security — probably never existed.

But that doesn’t mean the years of building were wasted.

I think I’ve arrived somewhere I didn’t know I was heading: a place where the question is no longer how do I accumulate more? but how do I actually want to live?


Since deciding to move, one theme keeps returning — something I can no longer look away from.

A relationship that lasted many years. The choices I made inside it. What that time actually was, and what I was really looking for.

Working through that feels necessary before I can fully step into what comes next.

→ Continued in the next installment.


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