159 Comments
Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

Also? I will never stop buying books. It would likely kill me to do so.

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

2023 - I bought a couch. It fits my 5'4" frame as opposed to couches that I have owned where my feet didn't reach the floor. I ordered it in a turquoise fabric that is both retro and modern. It has brushed silver decorative trim. The color matches a jazzy painting on the wall. I waited ten months for it and the day that arrived I told my son to lie down and I took a picture of him laughing on my couch. The couch pleases me very much.

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Jan 15·edited Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

As a person with ADHD I simply can't remember allllll the great experiences I had. I sure know I had them, but most times I need photo proof what it was really like. But I can see the objects that bring me joy every day around me. That's what really keeps me alive - finding beauty and joy in every day objects, art, books, furniture, papeterie. For a very long time I felt bad about that. A material girl. But the more I indulge myself in interior design teachings the more I learn how necessary it is - especially for a person who needs to be stimulated - to evoke the emotions I crave. Nothing greater than a flashing pink sofa with patterned cushions, a pile of art books and a hot coffee in my hand. ☕🙂

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Advice about how to live one's life ignores the fact that we are all individuals. My ex-husband and dear friend had a childhood full of uncertainty. His happiness rests in feeling secure at home. He doesn't want to go anywhere, he just wants to putter around his house, play his piano, read, and enjoy the company of his visiting family. "Experiences" are the last thing that would bring him happiness. A new book, now - that lights him up. I had a quiet, stable childhood and thrive on a wide range of travel and experiences. But that doesn't mean a new book won't light me up with joy, too.

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

If anyone goes couch shopping with me, they should know that said couch will be covered in cat hair mere moments after arriving in my home. 😻😻😻

This is such a timely post. I did a mega clearing of my clothes over the holidays. It was astonishing how much I had that I am genuinely happy to wear, once I cleared all the stuff that is no longer my style (or my size).

I decided not to buy any clothes in 2024 because I felt so well-equipped. But what I am letting myself buy? Fabric! Wow the joy I get from buying something fabric and actually making the new clothes. This has been a huge discovery.

So maybe it isn’t „don’t buy things“ but perhaps instead it‘s „how would it feel to buy different things?“

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

Kudos to you for bucking the “feel good advice” trend. I love to buy things for myself, family and friends that enhance that persons life or joy. Like most things in life the key is moderation. most things are good to great when enjoyed in moderation including acquiring things and having experiences.

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

I recently bought a tiny electric fireplace, and it makes me absurdly happy. I've decked out a little nook in my office to be a cozy corner, especially nice in the winter. This tiny electric fireplace is nothing more than a jazzed up wax warmer, but it's so nice to watch on a winter evening. I've fallen asleep next to it a few times already.

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Jan 15·edited Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

Yes, a couch can even make you ridiculously happy. Along with several thousand other souls - mid-pandemic, we lost everything + our home in a massive wildfire. It's not "just stuff" - things are a personal history; a representation of who you are. Thank you for this countercultural (to social, anyway) piece.

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

Chris, if we went couch shopping together, there are probably a few things you “should” (there’s that word again), know about me, and my general perspective on couches - which kind of applies to my life overall:

1. Comfort first. My home doesn’t look like something out of House Beautiful, and I’m more than a little OK with that. My home is for living in.

2. A thing of beauty is a joy forever. Despite comfort being the one criterion that rules them all, I don’t want to live in a dump. I love beautiful things and feel they enrich my life.

3. Cats… no explanation necessary other than the fact that we have 7. We seem to be a main portal for the Cat Distribution Center…

4. My couch, my rules. At 64, I’m finally comfortable enough in my own skin to have my own opinions and to stick up for myself. Of you don’t like my couch, or my rules, I know where there’s a great red couch on a beach…

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

You got me! I buy mugs. Mostly from East Fork. Don't tell anyone.

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

My perspective is that material things can bring pleasure rather than happiness. However, I do think that the ability to experience pleasure is one ingredient to happiness.

For me, the trouble comes when I try to substitute pleasure (which is easy and fast to attain) for actual happiness, which is complex, fleeting, and never guaranteed.

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Jan 15Liked by Chris Guillebeau

This is soooo funny 😆 We literally bought a couch this weekend and it makes me SO HAPPY!!!! I used to be a minimalist and now I’m somewhere in the middle. Experiences AND pretty things make me HAPPY! Thank you for such a beautiful perspective! 🙏🏼

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I appreciate this perspective so much. I'm a minimalist overall. I turn 40 this year and have never owned property, but I plan to do so (it's what I'm working toward now). I'm scared but also excited to have a place that is truly my own. That will definitely make me happy :) (and I'm already happy, so bonus!)

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I LOVE my bed and bedding and pillow - so much I take the pillow or at least the pillow case with me when I travel.

I have definitely been an experience over things person but have anxiety about spending money on both (and spend waaaay too much time on the research). It's worse for things (that aren't consumable) because there's more of a reminder that I've spent the money by their physical ongoing presence and also because I struggle to get rid of anything (getting better!) and because I live in the shadow of a hoarder and get overwhelmed by too many things so it feels easier sometimes not to buy things.

Ask friends whose couches you like where they got them. So many sofas look old really quickly (and not in a good way). We bought from sofa.com here in the UK (after going into the store to sit on them) because two friends had them and they looked amazing after years, as does ours after five years until the lifetime guarantee just ran out. Apparently a lifetime is five years and I only realised this after a child drew a nice red mark on one arm. So it's slightly less or more amazing now, depending on your perspective.

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"This couch is on a beach. What’s it doing there? No one knows. But maybe someone was really happy about having a place to sit and look away from the water." 🤣🤣🤣

The couch in a field brought back a memory that is still somewhat perplexing to me. This is, apparently, a thing in Montana. Driving down the highway, I saw countless houses with entire indoor living rooms cast outside. No one has ever been able to explain to me why this is, and I've never heard about it from anyone else... I've only ever seen it. If you or anyone else knows why this is a thing, I'd love a heads up! 🤣🤣🤣

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This reminded me of when I used to custom paint and up-cycle furniture. A friend donated an old, beautiful bench that I restored and painted red. I tried to sell it by taking photos if it at random places - the beach, in the middle of an outdoor amphitheater and a pasture alongside buffalo.

It’s true what you say about sentimentality because I still have it even though I had plenty of opportunities to sell it.

Thank you for your perspective on things and experiences.

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