2. Did you have more than one food item for dinner last night?
3. Do you have transportation other than walking?
If you answered "yes" to just ONE of these questions, you are among 10 percent of the richest people who have ever lived.
Think of that. No matter your individual financial means or struggles, your material wealth is beyond the wildest imagination of 90 percent of the people who have ever lived.
We may be struggling with the pains of shrunken incomes but no one that is reading this, on whatever electronic gadget, is struggling with the severe stomach pains that result from not having enough to eat.
More and more of us are having trouble making ends meet but most of us, regardless of our income, actually have much more than we need. Much, if not most, of our struggles are the result of having horribly confused our wants with our needs.
As part of that, let me ask three additional questions.
1. Do you need as many clothing choices as you have?
2. Do you need to eat out as often or spend as much money on food as you do?
3. Do you have more modes of transportation, including recreational, than you need or can readily afford?
If you are a regular reader you know my blog is "muchly" devoted to teaching how to make do well with less --- and discovering great satisfaction and happiness in the process. And it is a process.
I don't think I am pessimistic but I know I am realistic and I'd like you to humor me in the following exercise.
Let's do some assuming . . .
. . . that things are not going to get better soon.
. . . that our government is going to shortly run out of its ability to continue bailouts or handouts.
. . . that FEMA (our federal emergency management agency) will run out of means and manpower to assist with the ravages caused by natural disasters or other emergencies.
. . . that we will need to depend upon ourselves to help ourselves in any given circumstance.
Doesn't elastic, no matter how strong, how well constructed or how well intentioned its guarantees, have the ability to stretch only so far or in so many directions before it loses its stretch?
Is our ever-expanding, ever-assuring, ever-promising government any different?
Just in case ---- is it worth your time to spend some time determining between your wants and your actual needs?
AND/OR is it worth the pressure of being constantly in debt because you are too busy and too burdened trying to pay off or keep up with the stuff you thought would bring you happiness?
And then, just in case ---- to begin to make the necessary changes and/or preparations to enable your family to do and make do so that when the need arises you have what you need on hand to make your situation as comfortable as possible?
AND/OR would you welcome the peace and freedom you'd have (mentally and physically) if you took steps to eliminate the time and expenses involved in extraneous stuff.
It is a process --- mentally and physically. I'd
Note: After 16 months of writing thecreativecheapskate I have just learned that in the upper left hand corner of my blog there is a small rectangular area. If you float the cursor over it, the word "search" appears. And, also new to me, if you type a word (any word you want!) in that area it will bring up all of my posts having to do with that word. (If you are saying Duh! you are just seeing another example of simple Gail rather than simply Gail!)
So, to get you started ----
Type Preparedness in that area and it will bring up all the posts I have written on this essential subject --- water, sanitation, light, grab 'n go bag and more.
What are a few to the positives being preparing provides?
. . . Increased self-sufficiency
. . . Personal satisfaction
. . . More control of resources
. . . Peace of mind
. . . A great load will be lifted when you free yourself from debt and from "stuff"
Are there negatives?
When the hour of need has arrives, hasn't the time of preparation passed?
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