We are concerned about the economy. We worry about the stock market, investments and retirement. We are told: It will get better. It will get worse. It will rebound. Some say it will be bad for another year and then it will improve.
How do we cope? We have to make do with less. Lots of articles offer advice: Eat at home. Take the bus. Rearrange what you have, don’t redecorate. But at the heart is this question: Can we be happy with less? Can we do it when the American way is all about believing that we need and deserve more.
I keep thinking about is what it was like when I really had so much less. In my 20’s I lived in Washington, DC and made $11,000. I had an apartment and a car. I packed my lunch and saved up to go out for dinner. Was I really as happy as I remember?
Yes, I was-and you were too. The reason isn’t complicated. We wanted less. I was proud to be paying rent. I wanted to drive so making the car payment for my used 1971 VW Beetle was great. I bought clothes on sale or at consignment stores, and when friends moved they passed along the furniture they didn’t want. But over time, through reading and travel and meeting new people, I learned about nicer cars, and better clothes. I began to want a real couch and a newer car and I began to fantasize about someday buying a house.
Later my hopes included owning a Subaru and –I laugh to remember this—I thought I’d have the perfect wardrobe when I could buy one (yeah, one) really good purse. Today, four houses later and closets filled with shoes and purses, I can feel deprived simply by thinking about making this car last a couple more years. Everything I have now is nicer than what I had at 25 but it’s easy to feel poor. Why? Because I have seen --and imagined --better.
Wealth is relative to desire. Every time we yearn for something we can’t afford, we become poor--regardless of our resources. And when we are satisfied with what we have, we are rich. That second part is supposed to be true anyway. The hard part is to ignore knowing. We know there are nicer things and we know people who have them. In most cases we don’t
really know those people but we think we do because we have seen them.For this you can blame television and magazines like Oprah and Vogue. We see what others buy and own and wear. Every new thing whispers its promise of happiness then gradually slides into the background of everyday life. Then we notice that someone else has a different or nicer thing.
This is why many of us recall feeling better when we were younger. We felt like we had enough. We didn’t expect that we should have a lot more.
It’s our expectations that trip us up. We substitute one desire for another and convinced each time that the next –whatever-- will make us happy. What we need is less desire not more money. Here’s the solution this year: Expect less and want less. It might be anti-American, but it’s so sane and so smart.
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