I agree if it's sad if you actually hate your job, but rest assured that's not the case for me.
I like my job, it's not too hard, it's not too repetitive, there's lots of different things to do, I can often try out new things, I don't mind being "in the office". Sure, it's not always bright skies, but it's also not like I dread coming to work and I don't sit in my car each morning muttering "I don't want to go, I don't want to go" or something like that.
Frankly, I don't really see myself doing something different and should I ever lose my job, I honestly have no idea what I'd do.
But I'm still happier when I'm not at work, when I can really do what I want. It's not that I don't like doing what I have to do for my job, I just like the "free time" stuff more. To me, it's nothing like the famous trick question which of your children you like best. As far as this goes, personally, there IS a definitive answer, only It's certainly not "love-hate", but "love-love better".
To me there's a difference between liking your job in a "normal" way, and elevating it to some divine reason of your existence.
I think it really depends... I mean it could be that from the day you were born what you most wanted to do was say, paint, or act. If you can make a career out of it, I can see it becoming your whole life, you know?
On the other hand, when it starts as a way to make money, not a passion, not something that fulfills you and is your purpose in life, then making it the center of your life might be a bad idea I guess. Because that would become stressful.
I do think for most people the off time is more relaxing. Whether you love your job or not, it's still a job, so you probably have deadlines, people to pleases, things to follow, etc. Once you're off work though you don't have to worry about this stuff.
But for some people, their job being their life makes sense to me. Imagine going to various countries and taking pictures. That sounds like a vacation, right? Well that's some people's job. So yeah, sometimes it does make sense to me. But I agree a job will always have some degree of stress due to being a job.
Anyway, I agree with your message that you shouldn't forget to live and do things you enjoy in your free time rather than work constantly or be in a "work" spirit even on your time off. But... I still think it depends on your job. I can imagine any creator being able to just turn off their inspiration because they're on a day off, you know?
I can see how it can be that way in creative and artistic jobs.
I've always been of the assumption (perhaps a bad one) that those kind of jobs just don't pay enough.
I've always wanted to be a writer, ever since my second year of elementary school. Well, I AM a writer, I've published some short stories here or there, but that full novel still hasn't happened yet. I'm not worrying about that, there's still time
But actually making a living on writing alone? Even when you presume that you have the potential of becoming a bestselling novelist, that process will still take several years. You try to write the best books you can, but a lot time goes into constantly editing your style, becoming better as a writer, finding the right publisher, etc. It's not like one day you can quite your regular job and make the decision of becoming a full-time novelist: you just won't have any income whatsoever. And realistically speaking, your success depends on so much chance and talent, you might only contemplate that if you can rely on other means of support, like living with your parents or marrying someone who earns enough for the both of you.
So you have to look for a regular, steady job and keep what you'd really like to do as a hobby, hoping for the chance that one day you'll finally deliver that one story a publisher falls in love with and everyone wants to read.
Perhaps it's different for painters, actors, photographers. Perhaps it's the same. But I think there's a difference in the time it takes to deliver a finished product. Writing a 100 page story used to take me 3 months: when I was living with my parents and only had to go to school. Right now, I've been working on the same projects for years.
If the thing you really enjoy doing can also deliver you a paycheck, then I applaud that. But not everything has that guarantee.
Right, these things usually don't pay. But if they can, then it's ideal of course.
What I meant is that I feel it's more important to pursue something you're passionate about rather than do something you don't like for the money. Realistically, it would probably make more sense to have a steady part-time job for some income and pursue your passion as another part-time job. Unless you're lucky enough to become extremely successful and live from it.
I just feel like I'd rather be poor all of my life (as long as I'm rich enough to eat, have a roof over my head, etc) but have a happy, fulfilled life, rather than have a sad life and a big car and house. If my house can fit me that's big enough, I can fit my dreams inside of me and I'll feel like I have all the room in the world [/cheesy line].
I just wanted to say that "job" isn't always something horrible, if you have an opportunity to make it something you enjoy, do it. I know lots of people who regret never pursuing their dreams, but even the people who pursued them and ended up failing and being poor and stuff seem to say it was worth it.
Since the topic here is money, I guess what I mean is that money isn't a goal but a means. And sure I'm saving up right now, but that's because I have projects that require money to get started, not just for the pleasure of saving. I'm always interested in ways to save on stuff and how to deal with your budget and everything, but then I'm happy to leave that aside and just live, because once I've sorted all the money things, I can afford to just do things I enjoy, because I know it won't cost me more than it should.
I don't want to go through life and tell myself "what have I accomplished? What was the point?" I want to be sure every day that I'm working towards something, or doing things that matter, or making a difference. I feel that I'd rather sleep under a bridge and eat every other day than give that up.
Yes, the discussion was about money in general, not just where it comes from.
I have a feeling that many people confuse luxuries with basic needs. Like you say, some people think it's only natural that they "need" a big house and car.
It's difficult where to draw the line. You can live in a small house, you can use public transportation. Actually, any means of transportation other than your own two feet could be considered a luxury. But when does a house become too small? When you're a couple with four children, say, and you have to live in a one-bedroom appartment with bad heating and plumbing, is a larger residence really a luxury?
Suppose I won the lottery or something, or received this crazy inheritance, or whatever. I still wouldn't go for the "big house with pool" or "jacuzzi in the back" car. I think I'd really quit my dayjob and go after those dreams. Perhaps in a flash of altruism, brought on by the adrenaline and endorphines of coming into all that extra wealth, I might even help out some other people. What we do with our money is partly dictated by society as much as by personal choice, the thing is to find that harmonic balance and perhaps that's where so many people go wrong, like those guys who keep buying extra stuff while they should be paying their rent or feed their kids.
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.)
I never was able to see myself living in anything but a small house. Or dwelling. Or whatever. I don't take that much space to begin with, I suppose.
I prefer small places too. My current ideal size (taking into account that we're two people with pets) would be 500 square feet or so for the place itself (possibility of balcony/garden on top of that). When it's too big, it feels empty and soulless to me. I feel (I know it's weird) like I need the place I live in to be "hugging" me. It feels cosy, nice, warm. It feels like a home.
I have lived in bigger places before, and it made me extremely stressed. I felt like I didn't have a "safe place" to go, a home, like I was outside even when I was home. When that happened, I would usually reconvert just my bedroom into the whole "home" and barely use the other rooms.
I guess money-wise it's lucky for me as a smaller place costs less, not only to rent or buy, but to heat, light, and even to fill (have you noticed how when some people move to bigger place, they start buying more stuff to fill up the place?)
I don't like big houses with open floorplans, which seem to be really popular nowadays. I need to feel like each "room" is a separate "thing" with a purpose. Also, large places are too easy to fill with useless garbage that you can't possibly manage.
Also, Avistew continues to make very good posts. It reminds me of the internet before every 12 year-old and their dog got onto it.
The song's pognon pognon, and i think it's on the "Ca plane pour moi" album...I'm not sure, it's definitely somwhere among my lame mp3s collection though.
Don't think i ever heard anything about asterix tho, sounds fun.
I'm not sure if this is a southern thing or just my family, but growing up my family simply did not talk about money. I mean, financial advice was certainly discussed, but specifics of "I make x" or "that costs y" were pretty seriously frowned upon. People simply didn't need to know what you made, for better or worse. To this day I still have no idea what my dad makes a year, and I've never asked. As such, I try to be very careful to avoid such specifics when talking to people, but there are times when it would certainly be handy.
For instance, a friend recently wanted to know about moving to the Bay Area, so we were talking about some of the details. The fact of the matter is that everything out here is just expensive, and you can expect for your rent/food costs to be a significantly larger percentage fo your income than it would in say Georgia.
Personally, I try to adjust by not spending too much on gadgetry and such, but I think I fail more often than not. I'd say the bulk of my surplus spending goes into my stomach though. God I love good food, even if it does cost an arm and a leg out here.
I'm not sure if this is a southern thing or just my family, but growing up my family simply did not talk about money. I mean, financial advice was certainly discussed, but specifics of "I make x" or "that costs y" were pretty seriously frowned upon. People simply didn't need to know what you made, for better or worse. To this day I still have no idea what my dad makes a year, and I've never asked. As such, I try to be very careful to avoid such specifics when talking to people, but there are times when it would certainly be handy.
In Norway you can actually keep track of other people's income. I think it's maybe two times a year that the government give out information of how much money you've taxed. It's basically a search engine where you can look up everyone you know and figure out how much money they have based on what they taxed.
Haha I can imagine people going there to try and figure it out... Although I guess most people don't care.
I have no idea how much my parents earn either. They always considered that talking about money was "vulgar" and that knowing how much money you earn or spend is a poor people's thing.
Which is funny because I'm the opposite. The only time it really makes me uncomfortable to talk about money is if I need some. Or if someone is talking about giving me some (like, my grandfather for Christmas or something). Then I feel all bad about it. That is, I don't feel bad getting money for Christmas, but it's awkward if my grandfather asks how much I need or how he should give it to me. I fell like I'm demanding it when really, he doesn't have to.
I also don't like talking details when I'm the one giving it. Well, I've never given money directly, but if I pay at the restaurant or the theatre or something, it feels awkward having to insist that no, you don't need to write down the exact amount and make sure the other person invites you for something that's the same value.
Although it's not nearly as awkward as assuming that when someone said "I'll invite you", then meant they'd pay, and it turns out they don't :P
On that note I remember once, I was at a pub where friends of mine worked and I spent most of my evenings. I was sitting at the bar, minding my own business. Some guy comes to the bar to order and asks if I want something. I say "no, thanks". He insists, like, a few times, so in the end I said something like "sure, I'll have a coke" (I don't like alcohol). He orders it, gives it to me and tell the bar-guy "Oh, I'm paying for everything except the coke. She's paying for that" and he pointed to me.
Then he turned to me and said "I only ordered it for you because I could see you didn't dare order it yourself" or something.
Awwwkward, especially considering the reason I didn't have a drink already was that I didn't have any money. That was really weird, I mean, who asked him, right?
Oooh, and another awkward time related to money. I had lent money to a friend. Well, it's been over five years and I've moved countries so I guess at this point I won't get it back, but at the time it was supposed to be a loan. I ended up having sex with the guy (incredible, I know) and then he asked something like "does that mean I owe you more money now?"
...
I wasn't sure how to react lol. I was all "did you just call me a prostitute?". Although I think it's better than if he had asked "do I owe you less now?", as there would have always been a doubt that he was only trying to save money and wasn't actually interested in me at all.
I think he was just trying to make a joke, though, because he's a cool guy and we stayed close for years, but that was a big "what the heck?" moment for me.
So, I would definitely say that money can bring awkwardness
In Norway you can actually keep track of other people's income. I think it's maybe two times a year that the government give out information of how much money you've taxed. It's basically a search engine where you can look up everyone you know and figure out how much money they have based on what they taxed.
Yeah, I guess it is. I think it's okay to be against it in terms of political principles. Each to his own. The thing I hate about it is when people take the "I make more money then you" attitude. Most people don't care though.
Don't quote me on this, but maybe it works as a valuable tool for detecting crime and corruption. Not just for the media and people's personal interests.
Well, it only says how much people pay in taxes, and taxes are the government's property. I'm not shocked by it, I don't think it's supposed to be a secret anyways. I know in France your income tax declaration counts as a proof of residence, for instance, and if you have only electronic bills and/or don't have a landline you can't use much else. (Since anything official asks for originals, and a print of an e-bill isn't the original).
But I guess I can see how you could see it that way. Although I don't get people who want to hide how much they earn, it feels like they're ashamed of something or don't trust you. I mean by that that I understand not screaming it or telling everyone you meet, but if it comes up and you refuse to say it, it makes it look like you've got something to hide, and that just makes everything awkward.
I've never worked in a place where I didn't know how much everyone there earned, and I know how much my friends earn, too. Nothing specific to the cent, of course, more of a range. It's not that bad, it helps know if you can suggest a date (you can use that word for non-romantic stuff, right?) or if they can't afford it and you should rather plan something cheaper like renting a movie or playing videogames.
Plus, I'm not sure how common it is elsewhere, but I've had meals where the person who earned the more of the two just naturally payed the bill simply because they earned more. Hard to do if you don't know how much each other earns.
But you know, I guess that's cultural. I was thinking, in France religion for instance is a very personal matter. I don't know most of y friends' religion or even whether they believe in God. I don't know is my parents or brothers do, either. Sure there were hints at school when some students didn't have pork or didn't eat during the ramadan, but we never talked about it.
And I seriously can't imagine someone in France publicly say "let's pray" like you see in American movies. It honestly would be similar to someone publicly saying "let's masturbate". It's just private.
So I guess how much money you earn might feel the same. But so many people HAVE to know (your job, your country, your spouse, your business partner, or whatever else applies) that it just doesn't feel private to me to begin with.
EDIT: actually, a correction. While we never talked directly about belief in God and the like, several of my brothers have made strong anti-religion comments that lead me to believe that they're at least anti-religion, and I'd assume it's not in a "I believe in God but I think religion is misled" way. So I guess I know for them.
And I seriously can't imagine someone in France publicly say "let's pray" like you see in American movies. It honestly would be similar to someone publicly saying "let's masturbate". It's just private.
I can't help it! And it was totally called for here, I was talking about how religion is more of a private matter in France, in my experience, than it seems to be in North America.
aaah, i see. also something that's private: family issues. you don't go screaming them out where everyone can hear them. right? not at the supermarket or anything? I saw a lady divorcing her husband over what type of lettuce they were buying once :P
aaah, i see. also something that's private: family issues. you don't go screaming them out where everyone can hear them. right? not at the supermarket or anything? I saw a lady divorcing her husband over what type of lettuce they were buying once :P
Hahaha I thought you were telling me to shut up with my anecdotes until I read the end.
They were probably just arguing though. Unless you had a follow-up and know they did divorce over it. And I totally vote for romaine.
Comments
I like my job, it's not too hard, it's not too repetitive, there's lots of different things to do, I can often try out new things, I don't mind being "in the office". Sure, it's not always bright skies, but it's also not like I dread coming to work and I don't sit in my car each morning muttering "I don't want to go, I don't want to go" or something like that.
Frankly, I don't really see myself doing something different and should I ever lose my job, I honestly have no idea what I'd do.
But I'm still happier when I'm not at work, when I can really do what I want. It's not that I don't like doing what I have to do for my job, I just like the "free time" stuff more. To me, it's nothing like the famous trick question which of your children you like best. As far as this goes, personally, there IS a definitive answer, only It's certainly not "love-hate", but "love-love better".
To me there's a difference between liking your job in a "normal" way, and elevating it to some divine reason of your existence.
I think it really depends... I mean it could be that from the day you were born what you most wanted to do was say, paint, or act. If you can make a career out of it, I can see it becoming your whole life, you know?
On the other hand, when it starts as a way to make money, not a passion, not something that fulfills you and is your purpose in life, then making it the center of your life might be a bad idea I guess. Because that would become stressful.
I do think for most people the off time is more relaxing. Whether you love your job or not, it's still a job, so you probably have deadlines, people to pleases, things to follow, etc. Once you're off work though you don't have to worry about this stuff.
But for some people, their job being their life makes sense to me. Imagine going to various countries and taking pictures. That sounds like a vacation, right? Well that's some people's job. So yeah, sometimes it does make sense to me. But I agree a job will always have some degree of stress due to being a job.
Anyway, I agree with your message that you shouldn't forget to live and do things you enjoy in your free time rather than work constantly or be in a "work" spirit even on your time off. But... I still think it depends on your job. I can imagine any creator being able to just turn off their inspiration because they're on a day off, you know?
I've always been of the assumption (perhaps a bad one) that those kind of jobs just don't pay enough.
I've always wanted to be a writer, ever since my second year of elementary school. Well, I AM a writer, I've published some short stories here or there, but that full novel still hasn't happened yet. I'm not worrying about that, there's still time
But actually making a living on writing alone? Even when you presume that you have the potential of becoming a bestselling novelist, that process will still take several years. You try to write the best books you can, but a lot time goes into constantly editing your style, becoming better as a writer, finding the right publisher, etc. It's not like one day you can quite your regular job and make the decision of becoming a full-time novelist: you just won't have any income whatsoever. And realistically speaking, your success depends on so much chance and talent, you might only contemplate that if you can rely on other means of support, like living with your parents or marrying someone who earns enough for the both of you.
So you have to look for a regular, steady job and keep what you'd really like to do as a hobby, hoping for the chance that one day you'll finally deliver that one story a publisher falls in love with and everyone wants to read.
Perhaps it's different for painters, actors, photographers. Perhaps it's the same. But I think there's a difference in the time it takes to deliver a finished product. Writing a 100 page story used to take me 3 months: when I was living with my parents and only had to go to school. Right now, I've been working on the same projects for years.
If the thing you really enjoy doing can also deliver you a paycheck, then I applaud that. But not everything has that guarantee.
What I meant is that I feel it's more important to pursue something you're passionate about rather than do something you don't like for the money. Realistically, it would probably make more sense to have a steady part-time job for some income and pursue your passion as another part-time job. Unless you're lucky enough to become extremely successful and live from it.
I just feel like I'd rather be poor all of my life (as long as I'm rich enough to eat, have a roof over my head, etc) but have a happy, fulfilled life, rather than have a sad life and a big car and house. If my house can fit me that's big enough, I can fit my dreams inside of me and I'll feel like I have all the room in the world [/cheesy line].
I just wanted to say that "job" isn't always something horrible, if you have an opportunity to make it something you enjoy, do it. I know lots of people who regret never pursuing their dreams, but even the people who pursued them and ended up failing and being poor and stuff seem to say it was worth it.
Since the topic here is money, I guess what I mean is that money isn't a goal but a means. And sure I'm saving up right now, but that's because I have projects that require money to get started, not just for the pleasure of saving. I'm always interested in ways to save on stuff and how to deal with your budget and everything, but then I'm happy to leave that aside and just live, because once I've sorted all the money things, I can afford to just do things I enjoy, because I know it won't cost me more than it should.
I don't want to go through life and tell myself "what have I accomplished? What was the point?" I want to be sure every day that I'm working towards something, or doing things that matter, or making a difference. I feel that I'd rather sleep under a bridge and eat every other day than give that up.
Yes, the discussion was about money in general, not just where it comes from.
I have a feeling that many people confuse luxuries with basic needs. Like you say, some people think it's only natural that they "need" a big house and car.
It's difficult where to draw the line. You can live in a small house, you can use public transportation. Actually, any means of transportation other than your own two feet could be considered a luxury. But when does a house become too small? When you're a couple with four children, say, and you have to live in a one-bedroom appartment with bad heating and plumbing, is a larger residence really a luxury?
Suppose I won the lottery or something, or received this crazy inheritance, or whatever. I still wouldn't go for the "big house with pool" or "jacuzzi in the back" car. I think I'd really quit my dayjob and go after those dreams. Perhaps in a flash of altruism, brought on by the adrenaline and endorphines of coming into all that extra wealth, I might even help out some other people. What we do with our money is partly dictated by society as much as by personal choice, the thing is to find that harmonic balance and perhaps that's where so many people go wrong, like those guys who keep buying extra stuff while they should be paying their rent or feed their kids.
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.)
I prefer small places too. My current ideal size (taking into account that we're two people with pets) would be 500 square feet or so for the place itself (possibility of balcony/garden on top of that). When it's too big, it feels empty and soulless to me. I feel (I know it's weird) like I need the place I live in to be "hugging" me. It feels cosy, nice, warm. It feels like a home.
I have lived in bigger places before, and it made me extremely stressed. I felt like I didn't have a "safe place" to go, a home, like I was outside even when I was home. When that happened, I would usually reconvert just my bedroom into the whole "home" and barely use the other rooms.
I guess money-wise it's lucky for me as a smaller place costs less, not only to rent or buy, but to heat, light, and even to fill (have you noticed how when some people move to bigger place, they start buying more stuff to fill up the place?)
Hey, if you have bought any of their games you are investing in them.
Also, Avistew continues to make very good posts. It reminds me of the internet before every 12 year-old and their dog got onto it.
You can't possibly be THAT old.
At least it seems to me that there wasn't such a lot of us around when I was 12.
As for the thread subject, philosopher plastic bertrand summed up my thoughts better than i could :
Pognon Pognon Pognon Pooohoognoon
J'en ai pas trop donnez moi z-en
Du bléééééééééééééééééééé
Du bléééééééééééééééééééé
(Money Money Money Moohooneyy
Don't have any, please give me some
Some douuuuuuuuuuugh
Some douuuuuuuuuuugh
and no, it ain't the translation that makes it sound retarded).
I didn't actually know this song. I think I only know the Asterix one and "Ça plane pour moi".
Anyway, I remember the Internet back when not may people had it. There weren't many people my age on.
The song's pognon pognon, and i think it's on the "Ca plane pour moi" album...I'm not sure, it's definitely somwhere among my lame mp3s collection though.
Don't think i ever heard anything about asterix tho, sounds fun.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Nat0rOEMCA
Was it some tv coartoon's theme ?
Funny, i'm pretty sure i've never heard it. But then again i've never been a huge asterix fan.
Thanks anyway. Tried to find pognon pognon on youtube, but the damn thing doesn't seem to be on there
Haven't seen it in a while though. I wasn't too fond of how the fair-headed people seemed to have eyes glued over their hair, if I recall.
For instance, a friend recently wanted to know about moving to the Bay Area, so we were talking about some of the details. The fact of the matter is that everything out here is just expensive, and you can expect for your rent/food costs to be a significantly larger percentage fo your income than it would in say Georgia.
Personally, I try to adjust by not spending too much on gadgetry and such, but I think I fail more often than not. I'd say the bulk of my surplus spending goes into my stomach though. God I love good food, even if it does cost an arm and a leg out here.
Well, that's the problem with cannibalism
EDIT: Dashing! If you're here, the French equivalent would be "it costs the eyes from the head". Like there are eyes in other places...
In Norway you can actually keep track of other people's income. I think it's maybe two times a year that the government give out information of how much money you've taxed. It's basically a search engine where you can look up everyone you know and figure out how much money they have based on what they taxed.
I have no idea how much my parents earn either. They always considered that talking about money was "vulgar" and that knowing how much money you earn or spend is a poor people's thing.
Which is funny because I'm the opposite. The only time it really makes me uncomfortable to talk about money is if I need some. Or if someone is talking about giving me some (like, my grandfather for Christmas or something). Then I feel all bad about it. That is, I don't feel bad getting money for Christmas, but it's awkward if my grandfather asks how much I need or how he should give it to me. I fell like I'm demanding it when really, he doesn't have to.
I also don't like talking details when I'm the one giving it. Well, I've never given money directly, but if I pay at the restaurant or the theatre or something, it feels awkward having to insist that no, you don't need to write down the exact amount and make sure the other person invites you for something that's the same value.
Although it's not nearly as awkward as assuming that when someone said "I'll invite you", then meant they'd pay, and it turns out they don't :P
On that note I remember once, I was at a pub where friends of mine worked and I spent most of my evenings. I was sitting at the bar, minding my own business. Some guy comes to the bar to order and asks if I want something. I say "no, thanks". He insists, like, a few times, so in the end I said something like "sure, I'll have a coke" (I don't like alcohol). He orders it, gives it to me and tell the bar-guy "Oh, I'm paying for everything except the coke. She's paying for that" and he pointed to me.
Then he turned to me and said "I only ordered it for you because I could see you didn't dare order it yourself" or something.
Awwwkward, especially considering the reason I didn't have a drink already was that I didn't have any money. That was really weird, I mean, who asked him, right?
Oooh, and another awkward time related to money. I had lent money to a friend. Well, it's been over five years and I've moved countries so I guess at this point I won't get it back, but at the time it was supposed to be a loan. I ended up having sex with the guy (incredible, I know) and then he asked something like "does that mean I owe you more money now?"
...
I wasn't sure how to react lol. I was all "did you just call me a prostitute?". Although I think it's better than if he had asked "do I owe you less now?", as there would have always been a doubt that he was only trying to save money and wasn't actually interested in me at all.
I think he was just trying to make a joke, though, because he's a cool guy and we stayed close for years, but that was a big "what the heck?" moment for me.
So, I would definitely say that money can bring awkwardness
Why shouldn't he be able to remember the early 90s?
Yeah, I guess it is. I think it's okay to be against it in terms of political principles. Each to his own. The thing I hate about it is when people take the "I make more money then you" attitude. Most people don't care though.
Don't quote me on this, but maybe it works as a valuable tool for detecting crime and corruption. Not just for the media and people's personal interests.
But I guess I can see how you could see it that way. Although I don't get people who want to hide how much they earn, it feels like they're ashamed of something or don't trust you. I mean by that that I understand not screaming it or telling everyone you meet, but if it comes up and you refuse to say it, it makes it look like you've got something to hide, and that just makes everything awkward.
I've never worked in a place where I didn't know how much everyone there earned, and I know how much my friends earn, too. Nothing specific to the cent, of course, more of a range. It's not that bad, it helps know if you can suggest a date (you can use that word for non-romantic stuff, right?) or if they can't afford it and you should rather plan something cheaper like renting a movie or playing videogames.
Plus, I'm not sure how common it is elsewhere, but I've had meals where the person who earned the more of the two just naturally payed the bill simply because they earned more. Hard to do if you don't know how much each other earns.
But you know, I guess that's cultural. I was thinking, in France religion for instance is a very personal matter. I don't know most of y friends' religion or even whether they believe in God. I don't know is my parents or brothers do, either. Sure there were hints at school when some students didn't have pork or didn't eat during the ramadan, but we never talked about it.
And I seriously can't imagine someone in France publicly say "let's pray" like you see in American movies. It honestly would be similar to someone publicly saying "let's masturbate". It's just private.
So I guess how much money you earn might feel the same. But so many people HAVE to know (your job, your country, your spouse, your business partner, or whatever else applies) that it just doesn't feel private to me to begin with.
EDIT: actually, a correction. While we never talked directly about belief in God and the like, several of my brothers have made strong anti-religion comments that lead me to believe that they're at least anti-religion, and I'd assume it's not in a "I believe in God but I think religion is misled" way. So I guess I know for them.
But then you'd suffocate to death.
I thought us froggies were supposed to say stuff like that all the time :eek:
No, no, we say "let's all have sex". That's totally different
Hahaha I thought you were telling me to shut up with my anecdotes until I read the end.
They were probably just arguing though. Unless you had a follow-up and know they did divorce over it. And I totally vote for romaine.