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Do We Own Our Stuff, Or Does Our Stuff Own Us?

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

Being freed from being owned is a form of liberation with many manifestations.

The frenzied acquisition of more stuff is supposed to be an unalloyed good: good for "growth," good for the consumer who presumably benefits from more stuff and good for governments collecting taxes on the purchase of all the stuff.

But the frenzy to acquire more stuff raises a question: do we own our stuff, or does our stuff own us? I think the answer is clear: our stuff owns us, not the other way around.
 
Everything we own demands its pound of flesh in one way or another: space must be found for it amid the clutter of stuff we already own, it must be programmed, recharged, maintained, dusted, moved, etc.
 
The only way to lighten the burden of ownership is to get rid of stuff rather than buy more stuff. The only way to stop being owned is to is get rid of the stuff that owns us.
 
I propose a new holiday event, Gold Sunday: this is the day everyone hauls all the stuff they "own" that is a burden to a central location and dumps it in a free-for-all. Whatever is left after the freeters have picked through the pile is carted to the recycling yard and whatever's left after that culling is taken to the dump.
 
Frankly, I wouldn't accept a new big-screen TV, vehicle, tablet computer, etc. etc. etc. at any price because I am tired of stuff owning me. I don't want any more entertainment or computational devices, musical instruments, vehicles, clothing, kitchen appliances, or anything else for that matter, except what can be consumed with some modest enjoyment and no ill effects.
 
We live in a small flat and I have no room for more stuff, and I have no time for more devices or entertainment. I have too much of everything but money and time.
 
I don't want to pay more auto insurance, maintenance costs, etc., nor do I want more devices to fiddle with. I am enslaved to the few I already own.
 
The burdens of being owned by stuff are suppressed in a consumer-driven economy and society. The glories of owning more stuff are constantly being trumpeted out of self-interest, as is the act of acquisition. Those making money off the flow of new stuff into our homes promote it as the wonder of wonders.
 
Since nobody makes money promoting getting rid of stuff and not replacing it with new stuff, that idea doesn't get much media coverage.
 
Let's face it, Degrowth isn't profitable, nor does it generate taxes.
 
Given the dependency of our livelihoods on the constant acquisition and consumption of more stuff, it is a form of blasphemy to address the great psychological relief that results from ending the cycle of gift-giving and the replacement of stuff with more stuff.
 
Being freed from being owned is a form of liberation with many manifestations: in terms of work, being liberated from serving the pathologies of Corporate America and soul-deadening service to the state are liberating. In terms of politics, being freed from the crazy-making grasp of the Demopublicans' failed ideologies is liberating. In terms of finance, being freed from the servitude of debt is liberating. In terms of the material world, being freed from having to waste time, money and energy dealing with stuff is liberating.
 

Liberation isn't profitable, and more's the pity.

 

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Mon, 12/01/2014 - 00:18 | 5503514 honestann
honestann's picture

Yes indeed!  Distinguish productive goods from useless junk.  Though gold and silver are great stuff (to hold value), productive goods are the opposite of useless junk... assuming you operate those productive goods to emit a stream of real physical goods and goodies.

Sun, 11/30/2014 - 10:41 | 5501227 orez65
orez65's picture

All of this "buying stuff" and capital malinvestment is the result of the Federal Reserve's fiat money, aka the US Dollar.

If we were using "real money" ie gold or silver, as written in the US Constitution, we would only be able to consume what we produce.

Sun, 11/30/2014 - 10:46 | 5501235 Bobby Lee
Bobby Lee's picture

There is one exception to this philosophy of material simplicity: Too much is never enough when it comes to guns. And ammo. Because of the gold and silver.

Sun, 11/30/2014 - 11:30 | 5501374 tongue.stan
tongue.stan's picture

Anyone else see the irony in a site owned and run by billionaires and contributed to by millionaires espousing the anti materialistic doctrine of noble poverty, or the "evils of americanism" envy? It's become a self parody, and the entertainment value of the hypocrisy is only outweighed by the occasional insight of investigative reporting.

 

Sun, 11/30/2014 - 12:58 | 5501616 The Iconoclast
The Iconoclast's picture

In the comments section of an obscure, rabble-rousing website, posts about how zen and spartan peoples' lives are.  Lies.

Sun, 11/30/2014 - 13:11 | 5501641 silverer
silverer's picture

Top scientists will explain on TV how playing Beyonce video games will put food on the table.

Sun, 11/30/2014 - 16:46 | 5502213 cart00ner
cart00ner's picture

A divorce will get rid of most of that shit for you : ) Now live on a small yacht (no room for crap) work just 3 days a week & happy as.

Materialism: buying things we don’t need with money we don’t have to impress people that don’t matter.

Cheers.

Sun, 11/30/2014 - 17:42 | 5502372 TheGreatRecovery
TheGreatRecovery's picture

I enjoyed the posts on this thread more than any here I can remember.

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!