There is a significant difference between someone mourning the loss of income and someone mourning the loss of their relationship with their spouse or children, the impending mortgage payment they cannot make on an excessively large house, the potential of their children screaming at them, their family disregarding them, and their friends disowning them. It's called "being owned by your ownership".
It is something I (in my relatively recent rise in economic circumstance) have done everything I can to avoid. While we've increased our quality of life it is in long lasting adjustments with minor maintenance. My wardrobe has actually shrunk, as well as my material possessions. It's a hard line to walk in a first world country where materialism is often King.
The loss of income can mean the entire end of a lifestyle among those ruled by their income and equity. It's terrifying. They too, need assistance and understanding, if only to recognize that they, as people, are worth more than the contents of their wallets. If anything, they have a greater problem in trying to recognize their personal worth beyond a dollar amount. It's not good, and I hope that more people try to combat it for the awful that it is.
Yeah, personally **** those people, but stepping back and thinking about it, they're more a figure of pity than anything else. I don't think I could live like that, and my life can, by times, already be pretty rough. Linking your personal worth as a human being solely to your wallet... that really sucks-constant tension, fear and anxiety. Just awful.
It is something I (in my relatively recent rise in economic circumstance) have done everything I can to avoid. While we've increased our quality of life it is in long lasting adjustments with minor maintenance. My wardrobe has actually shrunk, as well as my material possessions. It's a hard line to walk in a first world country where materialism is often King.
The loss of income can mean the entire end of a lifestyle among those ruled by their income and equity. It's terrifying. They too, need assistance and understanding, if only to recognize that they, as people, are worth more than the contents of their wallets. If anything, they have a greater problem in trying to recognize their personal worth beyond a dollar amount. It's not good, and I hope that more people try to combat it for the awful that it is.
Yeah, personally **** those people, but stepping back and thinking about it, they're more a figure of pity than anything else. I don't think I could live like that, and my life can, by times, already be pretty rough. Linking your personal worth as a human being solely to your wallet... that really sucks-constant tension, fear and anxiety. Just awful.