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But will it make you happy?

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I Have A Dream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 11:20 AM
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But will it make you happy?
A two-bedroom apartment. Two cars. Enough wedding china to serve two dozen people.

Yet Tammy Strobel wasn’t happy. Working as a project manager with an investment management firm in Davis, Calif., and making about $40,000 a year, she was, as she put it, caught in the “work-spend treadmill.”

So one day she stepped off.

Inspired by books and blog entries about living simply, Ms. Strobel and her husband, Logan Smith, both 31, began donating some of their belongings to charity. As the months passed, out went stacks of sweaters, shoes, books, pots and pans, even the television after a trial separation during which it was relegated to a closet. Eventually, they got rid of their cars, too. Emboldened by a Web site that challenges consumers to live with just 100 personal items, Ms. Strobel winnowed down her wardrobe and toiletries to precisely that number.

Her mother called her crazy.

Today, three years after Ms. Strobel and Mr. Smith began downsizing, they live in Portland, Ore., in a spare, 400-square-foot studio with a nice-sized kitchen. Mr. Smith is completing a doctorate in physiology; Ms. Strobel happily works from home as a Web designer and freelance writer. She owns four plates, three pairs of shoes and two pots. With Mr. Smith in his final weeks of school, Ms. Strobel’s income of about $24,000 a year covers their bills. They are still car-free but have bikes. One other thing they no longer have: $30,000 of debt.

<snip>

And it’s been a truism for eons that extra cash always makes life a little easier. Studies over the last few decades have shown that money, up to a certain point, makes people happier because it lets them meet basic needs. The latest round of research is, for lack of a better term, all about emotional efficiency: how to reap the most happiness for your dollar.

(continued at link below)
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/08/business/08consume.html?src=me&ref=general


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Fire Walk With Me Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 03:33 PM
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1. "Emotional efficiency", I like that.
"One robe, one bowl"...as the Master lives.

I do note that "consideration" of our harmfully consumerist lifestyles is beginning to occur. The "shop shop shop" advertising I still see is nauseating. Thankfully we're moving in the right direction, in questioning what exactly will "make" us happy. Or not :)

:hi:
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FirstLight Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 08:19 PM
Response to Original message
2. BEAUTIMOUS!
I think I could easily live like that, since I have lived so far under the poverty line for so long anyway, lol

As long as the needs were met, I'd be happy as a lark...
My folks own 40 acres in the wine country and I have been beggin my whole life to go up there and just BE... "but you cant possibly" is their reply. meanwhile the property (house, tractor, etc) sits there unused, being recliaimed by the surrounding redwood jungle...

someday, my retreat will come ;)
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