Now, granted, putting a lot of value in material things seems, well... shallow and material. But that's not what I'm talking about. I don't realize (and I don't think many people realize either) the amount of work and amazing advancements that are used to produce the things we buy or consume.
One of my favorite quotes around this subject is from the comedian Louis CK.
In my lifetime, the changes in the world have been incredible. Now we live in an amazing, amazing, world and it's wasted on the crappiest generation of just spoiled idiots that don't care, because this what people are like now: they've got their phone and they're like "Uh... it won't..." GIVE IT A SECOND! It's going to space! Can you give it a second to get back from space! Is the speed of light too slow for you?!?!?!
Our clothes are made from cotton, which took time to grow, someone to pick it, it had to be processed, then dyed, then sewn, then shipped across the country (or from another part of the world), to a store where other people had to display it and tag it with a price... a price that is a fraction of a percent of my income.
It's pretty amazing... Most of my clothes are from the other side of the world! I eat food from anywhere in the world! I can have almost any book I want on my doorstep in 24 hours! I can talk to friends on the other side of the world anytime I want!
It's the ease and speed by which we obtain these things that I think diminishes the amazing-ness of what we actually do have. And, I think if we recognized more of the amazing-ness of what we already have, the urge to buy and consume things we don't have might decrease.
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