I'm not sure what to do both with the money - it's been 6+ months and I really haven't changed much in my lifestyle and with burnout - I certainly don't want to continue working under the same conditions but at the same time I love what I'm doing.
Would much appreciate any advice, I don't know any other place to ask.
edit: The reason why I consider continue working but on less hours is that I'm working on my dream job and grow/learn a lot of things in the field and I think that leaving I may miss this opportunity
Particularly check out the sidebar and Wiki info and links.
https://www.reddit.com/r/financialindependence/
https://www.reddit.com/r/fatFIRE/
If you are careful you can set yourself up for life, so that you can explore interests and never ever worry again. If you don’t have any interests right now, that is ok, they will come with time.
If you are not EXTREMELY CAREFUL, it’s very very easy to lose it all, and be broke in a few years.
Predatory financial advisors, lifestyle creep, making the wrong friends, making wealthy friends and trying to keep up with them.
Put an email in your bio if you want to chat more about this.
Start from the base and get your physical health and spiritual health in order. Top sleep hygiene, running, weights, meet up with peeps and play soccer. Read worldly books like Hesse and find some spiritual centering.
Then explore the world, even hiking in a national park nearby. Spur on new thoughts.
Then slowly get back into "producing" or whatever you want to do. Maybe go for a masters in something, or just create. Could be useful or just fun.
You're really lucky. You're prob a few years younger than me and have about 90x the money.
Bogleheads[0] is a good community, and Reddit has /r/financialindependence and /r/fatFIRE If you search these communities, you'll find others asking for similar situations with different numbers.
You can now control what you do in your time. You can use it to improve your health, learn something new, spend time with family, or work on a passion project of yours.
If you have questions about how to invest and live off your windfall, Bogleheads is a good place to learn about that as well.
1) Reduce working hours. Do this immediately. Every day you work 14h+ will extend your burnout by weeks, so stop now. Yes, dropping your working hours may affect your work output, but it's completely worth lower performance at work. A bad performance review is nothing compared to long-term burnout.
2) Take a break. At least a month. More is better. Many startups with successful exits are good about giving sabbaticals to the high performers that got them there.
3) Spend some money on therapy. With that much money, even if therapy does nothing it's still worth it. For me, even the weekly break to go to therapy was useful.
4) You don't have to spend the money on anything right now. I suggest depositing a portion of it into index funds on a monthly basis. You don't need the added stress of figuring out the perfect investment method, and with that amount of money nearly any safe investment will provide a passive income you can live on for forever.
5) I urge you to consider leaving your job. If the politics and coworkers really suck that much, then why do you even want to be there? There's always a few other companies in the same field, and one of them is definitely a better environment. Getting a startup to a successful exit makes you more than qualified to work at one of these other places.
6) Take some time to realize how fortunate you are. Realize how much room for making mistakes you now have. You could take the next 5 years completely off and still be ahead of nearly everyone in the world financially, and career-wise.
I am partway through recovering from the same situation. At the startup, I was a high performer, but occasionally got bad performance reviews due to politics and burnout. Looking back, I should have taken care of myself and aimed for even worse performance reviews. Bad environments don't deserve your stress and hard work.
Eventually I left, took a very long break, and eventually started interviewing again. I'm now at a different company in the exact same field, with better leadership, lower stress, and standard working hours. Ironically, the company has even better productivity than the high stress startup.
This time will let your mind wander and come up with ideas for adventures, hobbies, other lines of education or business or art you'd like to try your hand at.
In covid times this isn't really possible, at least for 3-6 months. Maybe learn to play the piano or something? Any interest you haven't had time to pursue is game.
Invest some of the money - ETFs in popular vanguard indexes in something like M1 Finance is what I might do. Don't look at it every day or even every month.
Financial Independence is a great gift - the gift of time - and having it so young is great. Enjoy!
Maybe cancer, global warming, Riemann Hypothesis, etc. Again, obviously very unlikely to be able to make any real progress on these, but I personally find it attractive to work on something big.
You don't feel it in your 20s unless you pay attention, but later on the overwork will take its toll no less than alcoholism or heavy drug use.
Talk to your management and get a reduced number of hours every week. Do this for at least 3-6 months and see how you feel. Then go from there. You already know that 10M+ is fk you money. So you technically don't need to work at all but I know that people like you cannot just sit on their butt. So "compromise" with your inner calling and don't do 14+ hour days anymore :).
Don’t have regrets.
Edit: My bad just saw you’re in your early 20s. Money isn’t everything. You’re not done yet - there’s a lot to do in this lifetime!