One of the strangest things about living in Vietnam with money is how quickly you discover that money is not the same as quality of life.
It helps, of course.
You can buy nicer things.
Better houses.
Better bags.
Better cars.
Better bikes.
Better illusions.
But the environment still gets the final vote.
That was the real disappointment.
Not that things cost money.
I do not care that much about the money.
I care that after spending the money, the result is still so underwhelming.
Take the R1.
A superbike in a place where I barely get out of first and second gear.
Third gear might as well be a diplomatic concept.
The roads are jammed.
The planning is nonsense.
The scooters flood everything.
Even the bridges and highways feel like they were designed by someone who had only heard of traffic from rumors.
So you buy the machine.
Then discover the country has no use for it.
Then take the Panamera.
A fully specced Porsche Panamera. Sounds like adult life, right?
Premium machine.
Comfort.
Power.
A bit of reward after all the years of grinding.
Then Vietnam enters the chat.
Old tyres.
Air leak.
Dealer looks scammy.
Conversations happening around you in a language you cannot fully audit.
You are standing there like a very well dressed ATM while everyone else performs the local version of due diligence, which is apparently just talking confidently until the money moves.
Then the tyres get changed.
The invoice for two tyres arrived at a number that could comfortably buy a used scooter.
Two.
Not four.
Two.
At that point it stops being commerce and starts feeling like performance art with invoices.
And this is where Vietnam gets philosophically annoying.
Because in some places, wealth buys peace.
Here, wealth often just buys better seats inside the same disorder.
You can build a ten million dollar mansion.
Walk outside.
Dog shit.
Garbage.
Horns.
Pollution.
Scooters moving like the traffic laws were written in disappearing ink.
Massive environmental stress.
Noisy streets.
Weak public discipline.
You can buy a nice car.
Then drive through a city where people ignore lights, ignore right of way, ignore lane logic, and operate on the basic civic principle that whoever sticks the nose in first wins.
At a four way junction here, thirty percent of the time it looks like all directions received the same invitation and accepted it enthusiastically.
And what do traffic police enforce?
Not the actual dangerous culture.
Not the random walking into live traffic.
Not the freestyle illegal turns.
Not the broad civic nonsense.
Helmet.
Big bike.
Then maybe some bribe collection if everyone is in the mood.
That is what makes the whole thing bitter.
Not that Vietnam is poor.
Not that Vietnam is developing.
Not even that some people are corrupt.
It is that even when you have enough money to avoid the usual constraints, the environment keeps clipping your wings.
The roads are still stupid.
The air is still trying to kill you slowly.
The systems are still manual.
The workmanship is still inconsistent.
The attitude is still often reactive.
The quality control is still a rumor.
So what exactly are you buying?
Comfort, yes.
Convenience, sometimes.
Status, maybe.
But not freedom.
Not ease.
Not scale.
And that is the ceiling.
The richer version of life here is often just the same frustration with more expensive upholstery.