Money makes the world go around, but does it dominate your life?

grahamg

Old codger
I posted these comments elsewhere on the forum but they didn't really fit in with the discussion so I'm putting them forth again here:

"Money makes the world go around", (I'd guess most would agree with that statement).

You could go further and asserts "money rules", or something like that, but does money rule our own lives?

I hope money doesn't rule my life, but I don't want to be without enough either! :)
 

I think it's been 2 yrs maybe longer since I bought some leggings and a few tops at a Ross's Dress for Less. Not sure how many years before that before I actually bought clothes and they were all thrift shop buys.
 
C.R.E.A.M. = "Cash rules everything around me...dollar, dollar bill ya'll" by WuTang Clan.
"If money makes you miserable, I'd rather be rich and miserable than poor and miserable" author Unknown
If money is the means to an end, then I guess no money is the end of your means...observation by Yours Truly.
"It's better to have and not need than to need and not have" as sung by Don Covay. That's the situation I'm blessed to be in.
 
There is a story of a fisherman who has one boat, goes out fishing until he catches what he needs, and then spends the rest of the day enjoying the sun on the beach. A business man comes along and tells the fisherman that if he were to get up earlier, spend all day fishing, he could buy more boats, expand his business, and make a lot of money. The fisherman asks the business man why he would want to do that. The businessman responds that eventually, he could retire and spend his days laying on the beach enjoying the sun. The fisherman responds that he can, and does, do that already.

Tony
 
I've always thought that people are happiest when they are somewhere in the middle.

When you don't have enough money for basic living, or when you have a huge amount, your whole life is taken up by worrying about money. People in the middle can relax and enjoy what's really important in life.
 
When this virus thing isn't going...........money can make us happy. Go out for a nice prime rib/lobster dinner. Go out for breakfast. Make a trip to Las Vegas for the National Finals Rodeo (hopefully next year). Get repairs done on both boat and vehicle. And, the list goes on and on.

When it comes to Senior health, ask any Senior, especially one that can hardly afford heart meds or something else, how important money is.
 
If I ever needed something I usually got it. My needs are simple and I don't spend much time thinking about what I don't have. My husband used to make me miserable because he was always desiring a lifestyle he hadn't the ambition to afford.
 
Some research on the thread topic:
https://www.andlil.co.uk/does-money-dominate-our-lives/

"Does money dominate our lives?
For the past few days, I have only met people who talk about money. It is the only prism of their existence, their only motivation, their only value. I sometimes find myself confused by this emptiness and especially by the certainty that no one can think any other way than that. All human actions are judged according to their own monolithic identification grid, money. A gratuitous act, willingness to help others or to share, seems totally foreign to them. And it's dubious even, it hides a desire to make money, it's forced, there's something. Even the most innocuous acts are a source of mistrust. Helping an elderly person carry their heavy bags (I have to reassure them that I won't run away with their shopping), holding the door to let someone in, etc.

People are defensive, suspicious, the values I obtained, through my very traditional education, no longer apply. They are perceived as a deception (will I abuse the helpless elderly person? if I hold the door it is because I want to hit on the girl, etc.). I obtained values that are no longer valid, helping others was a real reward in itself. Where is a chivalrous spirit, honour, dignity?

I had already encountered this kind of misunderstanding when, for example, I left my job as an IT trainer at Renault's head office. (I was able to personally train all the senior managers at that time, from Louis Schweitzer to Carlos Goshn then number 2, I was their personal trainer, I went straight into their office while the deputy directors had to wait in the waiting room (a way of reaffirming the hierarchy, which earned me an "aura" at head office (ridiculous)), in short a golden, protected, very lucrative position.

This did not prevent me from resigning, to earn half as much as I would as a history teacher. I was preparing for a competitive examination as an independent candidate after my working days at the head office. But there were still people in my entourage who could understand that it was better to have a job where I could consider myself useful to society rather than a well-paid job without social interest. That was 15 years ago.

Money as the only source of fulfilment​

Today, when I look around me, I no longer see many people trying to be happy, filling their lives with an interesting activity, a passion even if it is not especially lucrative. I receive emails that tell me, but why don't you trade more, why don't you just do that? Because money is not a goal, freedom is and you can be very free with little money. I would rather spend a day reading books, floating in the pool than trading, just to tell myself ‘super I earned €1,000’, but I didn't do anything with my day just earned money that will accumulate in an account. Even more, even more, why? A new car? Sad!

I have tried to understand why society evolved in this way? Why did it become more cynical, harder and totally turned towards the golden calf? And finally why is money the only purpose of an existence that will end in a wooden box?"
 
The kind of people who let money dominate their life can be seen on the TV show Shark Tank, and most of them are not very nice people.
 
Well, I don't think anyone has died of having too much money, but how many have perished, because they could no longer afford to live? The world is full of their stories. You can't eat platitudes, nor do principles keep you warm at night. I don't want to sound gloomy, but money is what keeps you out of the gutter and in a nice, warm bed. Some of us retirees may have enough income to be financially , in one way or another above water. While we may not think about money 24/7, we all know what will happen without it
 
we are average and get along just fine....but we are and always have been content with a little or enough...never had to much.
 


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