|
I<3>1
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: France
Posts: 5,051
|
I think on that aspects just like on some others, people get tangled in society's expectations. You'll always have people who get married because they think they're expected to, have 2 kids and a big house, and then wonder why they're not happy since they did everything right? Some people who don't realise there isn't a magic formula and everyone's recipe for happiness is different.
I think there is also that appearance thing. Wanting people to think you belong to a certain class, or something.
And then a lot of the time there is the "deserve" argument. "I work hard, I deserve nice things". Well, do you deserve to get in debt over things you don't actually end up using? That's what you should be asking yourself.
It's probably easier to follow a path that's already been written and is familiar to everyone, but if you're not part of the minority of people this standard path is ideal for, it's not going to bring you much.
I do think consuming is even more like that than other aspects, though. Because the money you spend will be gained by someone else, and advertisement can be about creating needs where there never were any. People buy something because they don't imagine they could live without it. Yet if you remove it they might not even notice. Some things have just become standard. Sometimes you end up actually needing something just because it's expected that you'll have it, when you wouldn't need it otherwise. I mean, for instance, a credit card, you might not need one but nowadays you get a credit score, and you need a good one for lots of things, so you end up needing to get a credit card. Well, I've never had one, neither has my husband, so you don't have to, but still, it makes things more practical. A need has actually been created.
And you have the special offers. How often do people buy something just because it's on sale? I have to say, though, if something is one sale half-price for, say five dollars, lots of people buy it, people who, if the same item cost five dollars without being on sale, would have no interest in buying it. It's ridiculous.
But yeah, the line is hard to find. You need a place to stay, but how big do you need it to be? As you said, you can't live in a one bedroom apartment with two children, I mean you can but it would suck. You'd need a bigger place if you're more people (but here again, even though we're talking about people rather than things, how many people have (more) kids just for status or because it's the norm and not because they actually want them?).
Similarly, while you can in theory walk everywhere, another way of transportation might be a need depending on your situation, be it a bike, public transit or a personal vehicle.
I think the important factor to keep in mind is happiness. If you live in conditions that are bad for your emotional or physical health, you're not meeting your needs. But of course in that case some entertainment is also a need.
And what of people who feel like they need a pool and tennis court in their home to be happy? I'm sure you'll agree that's not a need, but how can we say what is going too far or not?
I think people are happier if they can satisfy themselves with less. For some people it seems nothing is ever enough. They earn a lot but spend it all, the more they earn, the more they spend. It's like they're trying to fill something, and they're thinking "I'm not happy yet, I should spend more". But I think they've lost sight of what's really important.
Ultimately, if you spend less than you earn, that's good enough. Beyond that, we can't really judge what's excessive or not, because it's just different from one person to the next. I think it's something to keep in mind when other people are spending on things we personally wouldn't buy. If they can afford it, then good for them.
Anyway, it's all about your priorities. You might not care about what you eat, and have bland cheap meals, but spend a lot on, I don't know, comic books, because that's important to you. Or you might have no vehicle and use public transit, but eat gourmet food because you don't think you could live without it. So the "needs" will actually be very different from one person to the next.
However, when you're starting to impose it on other people, that's different. You might be able, personally, to share a one-bedroom apartment with 3 roommates as a student, and all 4 of you might be fine with that. But when you make your partner and kids live in these conditions... it just feels wrong.
You might be okay with eating ramen day after day, but once again, if you make you family do the same to save money, that becomes wrong.
Anyway, I think it's interesting to see people's relationship with money. I guess it's fair to say that we all think spending money on adventure games is a reasonable expense, even those of us who don't have much money at all. I'm sure lots of people would think it's crazy.
What other things that other people might consider luxuries would you be willing to spend on?
I think personally it's pets. I've only lived a few years of my life without cats and those years were terrible. I wouldn't spend money on getting a cat, since I've always adopted them, but on getting them the best food, on vet bills, on extra money for renting a place or for traveling with a pet, on finding places to travel to that accept pets, etc.
Lots of people live happily without pets, but I just know I couldn't, so no money I spend that allows me to have them feels like a waste. (I don't buy them clothes and weird stuff though. I mean, they're still pets, not humans. And as for toys, they're cats. They'd leave expensive toys untouched to go play with a piece of string or of paper, anyways.)
|