Rs8.5
Quote from OPTIONAL777:
No offense, but those who say they would continue to trade, are essentially saying that they would spend their time in the same way.
This is foolish. If you suddenly had the money to travel, or do whatever you want, you might likely find new avenues that would be more enjoyable than your past enjoyable behaviors.
Those who speak about what having money would be like, are just dreamers in so many ways.
The reality is that people with money, do lots of other things than the common folk, many that they never dreamed of. You begin to travel in different circles, are exposed to new values, etc.
Quote from Runningbear:
The saying "money can't buy happiness" was a term invented to make poor people feel good about themselves![]()
My view is completely subjective, but I've been really broke before and pretty well off before and all I can say is this - when you can't afford to pay to have the holes in your teeth fixed or buy the people you love even a small gift at Xmas, then life is pretty shit. When you're thousands in debt and you know that within a few weeks you're probably going to be bankrupt, have your credit rating destroyed and possibly never have another chance at a reasonable life, the stress crushes you. You lose the ability to laugh, even to smile.
The worse thing about having no money in a country where nearly everyone has it, is the personal feeling of failure that accompanies the situation. You hate your life and you hate being who you are and you regret every decision you ever made that led to the point you're at. At this point, killing yourself becomes a real option.
Maybe money can't buy happiness, but it can buy freedom, comfort, first class medical and dental, high quality food, and a plane ticket to a warm beach when you feel you need to get away from it all.
Runningbear
Quote from zboy2854A:
I think it's important to have some perspective here. The fact that all of us here are typing on this board means that we all have a computer. Here's another fact. If you have any money at all in your wallet and any kind of bank account regardless of how much is in there, you are among the wealthiest 8% of the Earth's population. Now, really stop and think about that for a second. Then think about the Rwandan man who had his foot sawed off with a dull knife in a Rwandan court because he was caught stealing a loaf of bread to feed his family. Compare our pursuit and questioning of happiness and wealth with a large portion of the planet that lives in apathy and utterly without hope.
We here in America and other wealthy countries often measure our happiness relative to a very narrow vision of what we see around us, rather than the actual reality in the larger sense. We look at the rare .001% of the U.S. population, i.e. the moguls, CEO's, celebrities, etc., and we compare our lot to THAT??? All of us here, by virtue of the simple fact that we have the leisure time to post our rants and chatter here, are at the upper end of human existence, and by all rights should be on balance among the happiest people on Earth. It sometimes may be hard to see that when trying to figure out how to pay the mortgage, etc, and surely it leads to stress, but relative to people in the world who actually live in such apathy that death would be a welcome respite, it's really not so bad.
Would I like a bigger house, a new car, and to not worry about the monthly household budget? Sure. But damned if I'm not grateful, thankful and happy for everything I have right now.
BTW, this post not directed at anyone in particular, just some observations.