Quite a powerful way to assess things, though with a more generous approach 
than want v. need. I can't see a single thing in our home that is not 
experiential. IT all has use and we've given away everything that doesn't. 
Life is much simpler that way.

With abandon,
Patrick

On Saturday, August 9, 2014 9:50:16 PM UTC-6, Ron Mc wrote:
>
> http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1057740814000631  
>
> http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/08/actually-some-material-goods-can-make-you-happy/375280/
>  
>  
>
> Quoted from a friend who collects and catalogs Paul H. Young bamboo fly 
> rods, but it must apply to bicycles and kayaks, too...
>
> It's often said, "Spend your money on experiences, not objects." 
>> Experiences continually enrich our lives, while an overabundance of 
>> material things weighs us down with cares, and cannot give us the 
>> satisfaction we seek. Now a pair of psychologists, Darwin A. Guevarra and 
>> Ryan T. Howell, argue that the "experience recommendation" is overly 
>> dependent upon a strictly dichotomous comparison of material items and life 
>> experiences. When consumption motives are examined in a broader context 
>> that includes "experiential products," - purchases that fall between 
>> material items and life experiences - the acquisition of experiential 
>> products provides similar levels of well-being to life experiences, and 
>> more well-being than material items.  
>
>  
>> The researchers explain that material items are purchased "in order to 
>> have" while experiential purchases are made "in order to do." Experiential 
>> purchases - like a certain Paul H. Young Para 15 Keller DeLuxe I could 
>> mention - are useful in helping to satisfy the psychological needs of 
>> competence (mastering fly casting), autonomy (getting out on the stream, 
>> identifying some mayfly species, tying on the right dry fly and catching 
>> the trout), and relatedness (going fishing with a buddy, or discussing the 
>> experience later at a club meeting or even on this Forum). And let's face 
>> it - if you don't have competence, autonomy, and relatedness, what do you 
>> have? And don't forget you're going to need a nice reel to go with that rod 
>> too.
>
>
>

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