dunkelblau
Recycles dryer sheets
I am going to say yes but with a caveat.
When I was 17 I told my mom I was going to retire by the time I was 40. Now this was mostly the impossible arrogance of a teenager. I had almost forgotten about it but my mom reminded me of it in my early 30s and became a goal. By then I was living in Silicon Valley and becoming rich wasn't all that far fetched a goal.
I also had different dreams at different times and circumstances. When I graduated from high school in the midwest my hope was for something like a six figure income and a million in the bank. But after attending graduate school in silicon valley, I woke up to what serious money looks like and my goals shifted accordingly. So while I may be in a good financial position from the perspective of the average American, by local standards it's been a disappointment. I'm pretty sure I'm not alone-- if you look up contentment surveys we're not doing all that well even if the numbers suggest otherwise.
For me this question is completely decoupled from standard of living. Mine hasn't changed since graduate school and I don't foresee any movement even at ten times my net worth. It's really a matter of what have I brought into the world and the answer is less than what I had expected at the time I finished school.