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Most of the luxuries, and many of the so-called comforts of life, are not only not indispensable,
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but positive hindrances to the elevation of mankind.
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With respect to luxuries and comforts, the wisest have ever lived a more simple and meagre
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life than the poor.
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Henry David Thoreau
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Can we be happier by consuming less?
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Well, many philosophers argued that a simple life is much more fulfilling than being immersed
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in luxury.
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By consuming less, we save money, we save energy, and, we also save the most valuable
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asset we have as human beings, which is time.
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This not only allows us to experience the joys of simplicity; it's also an act of
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rebellion against our consumerist society.
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Let's talk about this.
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We buy stuff that we actually don't need, depriving ourselves of hard-earned resources
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(even going into debt), only to further enrich an already wealthy minority.
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It seems that many people aren't aware of the societal brainwashing that's going on,
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planting a perpetual 'sense of lack' in our minds.
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In other words, the nagging feeling that we aren't complete, unless...x, y, and z.
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Even though the consumerist society reigns supreme in all corners of the world, the human
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tendency to purchase more than needed has been subject to criticism for many ages.
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Henry David Thoreau was an American philosopher who, at one point, began to pursue a simple
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and self-sufficient life by retreating into the woods near Walden Pond.
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He lived there in a self-built cabin for a period of two years and two months.
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This life-decision was an act of resistance against society, and part of, what he called,
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'civil disobedience'.
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Thoreau described civil disobedience as a form of non-violent rebellion against the
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government.
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In his opinion, the government brings people more harm than good.
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In his seclusion, he wrote his masterpiece 'Walden', in which he, among other things,
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describes the joys of a simple life in the midst of nature, and how he manages to survive
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with very little.
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As he states and I quote:
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..a man is rich in proportion to the number of things which he can afford to let alone.
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End quote.
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Needless to say, in his solitude and through his simple lifestyle, Thoreau felt “wholesome”
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which only further supports his criticism of overconsumption.
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Admittingly, we need to consume to some extent.
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Some things are necessary, like food and shelter, but these are relatively easy to obtain and
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easy to satisfy.
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I quote Epicurus on this one:
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The wealth required by nature is limited and is easy to procure; but the wealth required
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by vain ideals extends to infinity.
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End quote.
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So, what then, drives people to work overtime in jobs that they don't like, so they can
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buy more than they actually need?
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Well, most people are easily influenced by their environment.
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Trends, fashion, a guy's name on their underwear…
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Even though we don't need those things, companies repeatedly succeed to convince us
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otherwise.
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We can feel utterly content in one moment, but experience a sense of lack in the next,
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because of the many voices that tell us that we need this, and that, just to conform to
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the rest of the herd.
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Or even worse: just so that people won't look down on us and ignore us.
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I quote Stoic philosopher Seneca:
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What fools these mortals be!
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They allow the cheapest and most useless things, which can easily be replaced, to be charged
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in the reckoning, after they have acquired them; but they never regard themselves as
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in debt when they have received some of that precious commodity, – time!
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And yet time is the one loan which even a grateful recipient cannot repay.
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End quote.
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Time is our most valuable asset, and it's running out as we speak.
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We can exchange time for money, but we cannot exchange money for time.
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Yet, we waste our lives in the pursuit of keeping up with the Joneses.
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Or as Fight Club's main character Tyler Durden states: “...working jobs we hate
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so we can buy shit we don't need.”
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The consequence (and I paraphrase Durden here) is that the stuff you own ends up owning you.
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It becomes a burden, a deadweight, something that costs us more than it brings us.
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So, what does it bring us?
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Status, respect, praise, short-term pleasure?
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These things are completely beyond our control and unnecessary for experiencing contentment.
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Now, the voices that tell us to consume, aren't really the problem.
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These are external forces that are not up to us.
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The problem lies in us allowing ourselves to be manipulated.
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The root of this weakness lies in fear.
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Alain de Botton describes a phenomenon of modern society called 'status anxiety'
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as, and I quote, “the constant tension or fear of being perceived as 'unsuccessful'
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by the society in materialistic terms.”
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End quote.
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So, what's the solution?
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First of all, I'd say: care less about what other people think.
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Friends that only accept you because of your status and material success aren't really
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friends, and there's nothing to be gained by impressing people that you don't even
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know, just for the sake of impressing them.
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Are people ridiculing us because we don't measure up to their definition of success?
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Well, that's their business; not ours.
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Once we accept that our wholeness does not depend on material success, we can truly enjoy
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the richness of a simple life.
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As Lao Tzu, author of the Tao Te Ching once wrote: “those who know they have enough
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are truly wealthy.”
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End quote.
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A simple life doesn't mean that we should ascetically renounce everything material.
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Besides the basic necessities, there's value in things that serve us in the practical sense.
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Ours is the ability to discern between necessity, practicality, and luxury, so we prevent ourselves
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to become prisoners of our possessions.
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Being content with little is the ultimate civil disobedience in modern times.
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It loosens the grip that society has over us, by not needing what they have to offer
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in exchange for our time and labor.
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By owning and needing less, our existence becomes less complicated and less stressful.
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A life of simplicity grants us the space to truly enjoy the time that's given to us,
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to spend our time on what we deem as important, and to be in the moment which doesn't require
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anything more than our attention.
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As Thoreau states, and I quote:
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Our life is frittered away by detail… simplify, simplify!
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Thank you for watching.