Lay people generally want to live a good/ideal life. Similarly, many researchers investigate what it means to live a good life. In that, the concepts of a happy (hedonic) and meaningful life (eudemonic) have been investigated thoroughly (see for example Baumeister et al. 2013). Recent studies of Oishi et al. shed light on a third dimension called "psychological richness" (Oishi et al. 2019, 2021; Oishi & Westgate 2021) which has not been studied extensively yet. Oishi et al. (2019) propose that a psychologically rich life is different to a happy and a meaningful life. While a happy life is based on positive experiences, pleasure and comfort, a meaningful life is about self-realization and purpose. A psychologically rich life utilizes a different approach to a good life and describes a life which is shaped by variety and curiosity. A significant amount of people seek this new dimension according to new research (Oishi et al. 2020). Even though a lot of people seem to seek this dimension of a good life in their lives, it is less understood compared to a happy and meaningful life. While previous studies focused on investigating various aspects of leading a happy, meaningful, and psychologically rich life, these studies did not investigate what people explicitly associate with these dimensions. This study is interested in the different associations people have with leading a either a happy, meaningful, and psychologically rich life compared to people who overall lead a good life and what lifestyles, meaning concrete behaviors, emotions, and cognitions people associate with each dimension.