Wealth & Fulfillment Assessment Stop copying someone else's money strategy blindly. Your current stage determines which path actually fits. Take 3 minutes to find your core mission, see whether outdated beliefs are holding you back, and check whether money is costing you more important forms of wealth.
💡 Tip: In the first section, read every option carefully and choose the highest or most comfortable state you can honestly sustain right now. That helps the system place you in the most accurate wealth stage.
Part 1: Identify your current asset stage
1. Which range best matches your approximate net worth?
A. Less than USD 10,000 B. USD 10,000 to 100,000 C. USD 100,000 to 1 million D. USD 1 million to 10 million E. USD 10 million to 100 million F. More than USD 100 million
2. In daily spending and lifestyle, which level of freedom fits you best right now?
A. Your margin for error is low, so an illness or a day off could interrupt your income and destabilize daily life. B. You can shop for groceries without scrutinizing every item, and buying a few extra essentials does not feel stressful. C. You can order at restaurants without being ruled by the price tag or regretting every dish you pick. D. You can comfortably spend on experiences, travel, or nicer hotels without being talked out of it by the price. E. You can realistically afford the home you want, so housing is no longer a major life constraint. F. Money has become a tool for shaping the world, changing industries, or supporting research.
3. What is the main mission you most need to focus on at this stage?
A. Increase income, reduce debt, and build a basic emergency fund that can absorb unexpected setbacks. B. Invest in your skills and find the overlap between your strengths and market demand to raise active income. C. Put money to work, keep acquiring productive assets, and avoid letting lifestyle inflation outpace growth. D. Find leverage that helps you break beyond the limits of salary alone and standard investing. E. Protect existing wealth and solve the new problems that appear as assets grow. F. Build something lasting that continues to create impact even after you step away.
4. For everyday expenses, what amount can you spend without feeling anxiety or guilt?
A. Up to USD 3 B. Up to USD 10 C. Up to USD 100 D. Up to USD 1,000 E. Up to USD 10,000 F. Everyday spending has little practical meaning to me now, and I feel no anxiety about the amount.
5. When a new money-making opportunity appears, which instinct best matches your current trade-off between income and time?
A. To earn an extra USD 30, I am willing to spend half a day or more on labor or side work. B. I am willing to freelance or work overtime for a few hundred USD of extra income. C. If a new opportunity cannot bring in a few thousand USD, I will not trade away valuable time easily. D. I focus only on leveraged opportunities that can return tens of thousands of USD or more, and I reject scattered low-pay work. E. I no longer trade time for tiny percentage gains and mainly focus on protecting assets at the million-USD level and above. F. I invest my time only in decisions that can create major social impact, not simply in work that makes money.
Part 2: Measure your fulfillment score
Use the concrete indicators below to assess your life across five core dimensions:
1. How much pressure and choice do you have in your daily life?
1 point: Life feels extremely pressured, even basic choices are stripped away, and survival anxiety dominates each day. 2 points: You are barely holding things together. Daily life is manageable, but any surprise could trigger a crisis. 3 points: Life is becoming steadier. The worst pressure has eased, but earning money still dominates your focus. 4 points: You have breathing room. Money works like seasoning that improves life, and you have more choices. 5 points: Life feels abundant and secure. Money no longer creates meaningful limits in how you live.
2. How healthy are your relationships and close connections?
1 point: You feel isolated, have no close friends, and your family relationships are highly conflicted. 2 points: Relationships feel distant. You may know one or two people casually, but opening up feels difficult. 3 points: Social life is functional. You have two or three people you can occasionally talk to, and family ties are average. 4 points: You have stable support. There are several close friends, and your relationship with family or a partner is solid. 5 points: Your connections are deep. You have five or more people you can truly rely on for strong emotional support.
3. How stable are your inner sense of achievement and motivation?
1 point: You feel deeply empty, have no idea what drives you each day, and feel intensely lost. 2 points: Motivation depends on external pressure. Without money pressure or outside force, drive quickly fades. 3 points: You are occasionally uncertain. The broad direction is clear, but sometimes you wonder whether your work matters. 4 points: Your goals are clear. You have stable sources of accomplishment and know what you are pursuing right now. 5 points: You feel inwardly fulfilled, driven by a strong and clear sense of mission in life.
4. While pursuing your goals, how is your health holding up?
1 point: Your body is severely depleted. You have sacrificed health for money and may already face irreversible damage or serious chronic illness. 2 points: Warning signs are flashing. You often stay up late, feel exhausted, and ignore obvious physical issues. 3 points: Health is average. There is no major illness, but exercise is lacking and your energy can dip. 4 points: You take care of yourself. Regular exercise and decent sleep keep your body able to support what you want to do. 5 points: You are vibrant and healthy, maintain body and mind well, and have plenty of energy to enjoy life.
5. How fully do you control the way your time is allocated?
1 point: You feel trapped. Your time is completely taken over, and your best hours are sold away with almost no room left for yourself. 2 points: You can only squeeze out tiny pockets of time after work or on weekends for what matters to you. 3 points: There is some balance. You have a degree of free time, but your best hours are still mostly controlled by work or obligations. 4 points: You are highly self-directed and can decide most of your schedule around what matters most. 5 points: Your time is fully yours. You control your calendar and can direct your energy toward what you truly love.
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