@madnige
But then, a lot of people don't appreciate just how big a million is, either.
For scale:
https://www.quora.com/Can-I-carry-one-million-dollars-in-one-dollar-bills-in-a-suit-case
A bundle of 200 bills weighs about half a pound and takes up about 15 cubic inches of spaces. A million in singles would mean you'd need 5,000 of these bundles. That would weigh over a ton, and take up 75,000 cubic inches, which is roughly 40 cubic feet. That would be a heck of suitcase, and I'd be singularly impressed if you managed to heft it.
ETA: a couple more views of scale
https://www.ehd.org/science_technology_largenumbers.php
One way to better understand large numbers is to compare the heights of stacks of varying numbers of dollar bills. The thickness of a single one dollar bills measures .0043 inches or .0000000679 miles.
The height of a stack of 100 one dollar bills measures .43 inches.
The height of a stack of 1,000 one dollar bills measures 4.3 inches.
The height of a stack of 1,000,000 one dollar bills measures 4,300 inches or 358 feet โ about the height of a 30 to 35 story building.
Yet another way to understand large numbers is to compare the lengths of varying numbers of dollar bills laid end-to-end. The length of a single one dollar bills measures 6.14 inches.
The length of 100 one dollar bills laid end-to-end measures 614 inches or 51.17 feet.
The length of 1,000 one dollar bills laid end-to-end measures 512 feet. This would approximate the length of some of the longer home run balls hit by professional baseball players. (The world record for the longest home run, estimated at 643 feet, was set in 1961 by Mickey Mantle.)
The length of 1,000,000 (one million) one dollar bills laid end-to-end extends 96.9 miles. This would easily traverse the 21 miles across the English Channel from the shores of England to the shores of France and back more than two and a half times.