 Originally Posted by Oneironaut
I'd like to know how many of you value all of the commodities that we have to a degree that it would make life nearly unbarable (sp?) to have to think about cutting back on consumption (on both a personal and a global scale) and how many of you are comfortable with a "simpler life" - one that puts a less emphasis on technology, industry, etc.?
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I am extremely fortunate to have Amish friends about three hours north of here. I've learned a lot about myself by spending time with them - which I do as often as possible... at least a couple weekends each month.
I wouldn't want to go that far, but the reality of how much waste results from even my relatively low budget lifestyle really comes into focus when I'm around them.
From this perspective, it seems to me that the more prosperous we are and the more we bask in consumerism, the more divorced from our own natures we become. We get soft... emotionally, physically and mentally. Then we spend even more money trying to make up for that with gyms and workouts, games and recreation and all sorts of entertainment.
The other thing that really hits home among the Amish is the reality of human ability to create wealth... that wealth is not a fixed pool that gets moved from here to there. They are always working... always creating wealth - from the kids to the grandparents, except on Sundays. They tap maple trees and make syrup, run lumber mills, bake, cook, can, farm, build, repair... their waking lives, six days a week, are all about creating wealth where there was little or none before. And they tend to thrive as a result.
They are also a very tight society that takes care of their own. They wouldn't survive otherwise. This, too, is a cost of our consumer mindset - the disolution of social groups because they really aren't needed anymore.
I believe our society would benefit in many ways by reduced consumerism... but not at the hand of any overseeing power that might force us to do so. It is one thing to be generous... and another thing entirely to have a third party order you to be generous and punish you if you choose otherwise. I think most of us in western society would be astonished at just how little we can comfortably get by with... and how good it can feel to do so... and how much good could be done with what is left over.
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