Here's something that I've found difficult to wrap my head around. The relationship between the Schwarzschild radius and mass is linear. It's generally known that if you take an object in the universe and squeeze it down to it's Schwarzschild radius, that radius will always be smaller than smaller than the original object's radius. E.x, the sun has 1 solar radius, which is much larger than it's Schwarzschild radius of 3 km.
But if you started calculating Schwarzschild radius for an object with really high mass, things seem to get a bit funky. Take an object that has a mass of $10^{100}$ kilograms. The corresponding Schwarzschild radius for that is $1.48513 \times 10^{73}$ meters. But if we took an object that has the density of the Sun (1410 $kg/m^{-3}$) and tried to find it's radius normally, we end up with a radius of $1.19244 \times 10^{32}$ meters which is smaller than the Schwarzchild radius. How is this possible? I understand that you won't be able to have an object that large enough to even consider this to be "possible", but this still is confusing to me. Are my calculations off?