by nil on Sat Dec 06, 2008 9:36 am
Those credit card debts are just numbers. They are no more meaningful than the funny gold you collected in World of War Craft or other silly on-line games--as long as you are no longer playing the game.
The problem is, in the game of real life, we can't easily leave the game until the day we fell into the grave. So it depends on how long are you planning to play this game, you shall budget your funny-gold-currency accordingly. It has little to do with the little plastic money but a lot to do with how well we know ourselves. Why do we buy things we never need and dump it away when we no longer want? If the shoes last years on your feet, by all means, buy them, mortgage your house if you need to. But if they only touch your feet for a week or a night, then you didn't really buy what you wanted, you just bought what you thought you wanted. That's the problem, we buy what we thought we wanted, but not what we really wanted.
The sadness of modern economic is: Selling people things they never need so we can buy things we never wanted.
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