Courtesy: Creative Commons
“Wealth is the ability to fully experience life.”
~ Henry David Thoreau
Do we really need money to live?
Have we substituted money for our true wealth, what American essayist
Henry David Thoreau describes as the ability to fully experience life?
The question has often piqued my curiosity and prompted my 100th podcast.
If money were the final arbiter to an abundant life, wouldn’t those
with the largest sums be legendary? They’d claim the best
health and longevity; the greatest joys from personal pursuits; the
happiest marriages and relationships; and the highest levels of peace
and well-being.
But they don’t.
Admittedly, money is a necessary vehicle of exchange that provides us
with access to clothing, shelter and transportation. Money can connect
us with lots of good things, but it has hardly lived up to its
reputation for delivering us true wealth.
Comparative Life Stories
Growing up in the late ’60s, I discovered the hypnotic properties of
money as a substitute for self worth. I also learned something about wealth.
A seminal event occurred when a relative drove up to our house one
day in his “new” used car. He, his wife and their four growing children
clumsily crept out of a squared-off, dark brown vehicle that could have
served as side car to a German military tank.
Back then, our Made-in-America world was typified by Detroit’s
popular, sleek and aesthetically designed automobiles. So I wondered
where such an old and unattractive relic came from.
An awkward moment arose when we stepped outside to inspect this
curious vehicle known as a Mercedes. I knew that a family-sized station
wagon or a sumptuous new Cadillac would have garnered legitimate raves.
Instead, any genuine praise was replaced by odd talk about the car’s
sturdiness and longevity.
It wasn’t until I discovered this foreign car was known for its
expensive sticker price that my confusion turned to clarity: my uncle
had purchased his over-priced elephant to impress other people. He
needed an expensive foreign car to compensate for an obvious deficit in
self-worth.
The event served as my first lesson in money being used as
replacement for abundance. Fortunately, I would come away with other
lessons.
Wealth Without Much Money
Some of my happiest — and richest — memories arose through my
childhood friendship with Phyllis Fritzlo. The Fritzlos lived a few
houses away from us in a ground floor apartment of a modest, 2-family
home. Phyllis’ mother didn’t drive and her dad drove an older model car.
Mr. Fritzlo was a handsome, outgoing and jovial family man who worked
as truck driver or laborer in New York’s garment industry. He loved
bringing dresses home from the factory and gushed over his two
daughters’ beauty as they modeled their new clothes.
The Fritzlos were hardly awash in cash but their happiness, hospitality and family wealth are unforgettable to me.
Favorite memories include sitting around their kitchen table after
school, all of us in rapt conversation. The Fritzlos welcomed company of
all ages, including us kids. Most legendary was the Fritzlo brand of
homemade spaghetti sauce. I loved watching Mr. Fritzlo cook up an
impromptu sauce by crushing fresh tomatoes grown in the family’s
backyard.
Another abundantly happy day took place in late Spring of 1967. It
marked Phyllis’s 9th birthday and several of us girls were invited to
join her and her dad for a special trip to New York City. Six of us
girls jumped on a bus, buzzed through the Lincoln Tunnel and emerged in
Times Square. We walked around in the warm sunshine feeling quite
special. The highlight of our day was sitting down for pizza at one of
New York’s many pizza parlors. In magical fashion, music from the Young
Rascals pop hit Groovin’ (on a Sunday Afternoon) wafted through the pizza parlor’s speakers.
Mr. Fritzlo’s monetary outlay that day was likely nominal but the
experience was priceless to me and probably for the other girls, too.
When Money Isn’t Delivering You Life’s Riches
If money isn’t delivering us all of the things we really want in life, why do we continue to bestow upon it such undue power, awe and respect?
We’re all to blame for this socially mis-engineered condition.
We’ve fallen prey to the belief that we need money to live. We’ve
allowed money to rule over our value systems, our institutions and even
our critical life decisions. But when the value of money is placed above
the worth of our very lives, we feel the opposite of wealthy. We feel
devalued, underappreciated and even drained of energy and joy.
If you have ever pondered why money carries such an overwhelming
importance in our lives and decision-making processes, I hope you listen
in to my 100th milestone podcast.
If you’ve ever blamed others for compromising themselves to money or
have condemned yourself for doing the same, you should find some uplift.
Regardless of past or current circumstances, we can all make room for
small adjustments that deliver us wealthier lifestyles.
Then, listen in to author and tiny house celebrity Felice Cohen who
shares with us what makes her happy from the inside out, too.
Listen here for Podcast 100: What if you didn’t need money to live?
May
you get happier discovering ways to live without the burdens of money
and find fresh inspiration to create a truly richer life of your own!
For additional resources:
One of my first videos entitled, The Money Gate.
Results from my World Happiness Survey spotlighting what we really want in life.
Download my free book of Favorite Happiness Quotes.
Maura is an International Speaker on Influence, Leadership and Emotional Intelligence
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