Just read something interesting about how Lin-Manuel Miranda, despite making massive millions from Hamilton, still lives in the same neighborhood where he grew up. That's actually wild when you think about it.



Where does Lin-Manuel Miranda live now? Still walking distance from his childhood home. He can literally walk to where he took piano lessons as a kid from his apartment. That level of consistency is rare for someone at his level of wealth.

What caught my attention though is his whole approach to money. The guy was so paranoid about debt that he didn't even open his first credit card until he was 28 — after Hamilton already opened on Broadway. By then he had enough cash to buy an apartment but no credit history, so his father had to co-sign the mortgage. Extreme? Maybe. But it shows how intentional he is about financial decisions.

His dad, Luis Miranda Jr., has basically been his financial advisor the whole time, guiding him through the sudden wealth and major decisions. Rather than just throwing money at luxury stuff, Miranda treats money like a tool. He's focused on what matters to him — causes, organizations, passion projects that actually align with his values.

The real story though? When Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico in 2017, he didn't just write a check. He brought Hamilton to Puerto Rico for three weeks in 2019, performed in it himself, and donated all the proceeds — around 15 million dollars — to arts recovery efforts. That's not just charity, that's understanding money as something that can create real, lasting change.

It's a different way of thinking about wealth that most people don't really consider. Not about accumulating stuff, but about impact.
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