A career-focused, cynical post after a job-draining, thoughful week. 5 weeks until the Festival…
I remember this especially riveting lecture on risk vs. reward – a study on the thought process people go through before making big investment purchases — purchases that cause a set-back in day-to-day living but offered high return after time: first house, new car, adopted child.
My main immediately jumped to relationships. Risk vs. reward. Impact on day-to-day. Decision fear. Compared to picking a signficant other, new cars are cake.
First, back to BC.
BC was a hot bed of consumption – and not just of the product variety. We bought up campus clubs and weekend retreats with the same ferocity as Vera Bradly bags and supplies for the ultimate Beirut table. We knew no moderation but were still methodical in our purchasing. Each acquired good was intentional and part of a greater image, need, or plan (I’m expounding – stay with it).
After that Shop ‘til You Drop lecture it dawned on my that our relationships – or lack there of (hhmm) – were another piece of this consumption game. With that background and my current NY life I’ve developed a theory:
BC was a playground for this – a place full of people raised to focus on careers, dreams, goals – themselves. We were overachievers in every area but love (aaww). Post grad life, from what I’ve seen in Manhattan, often follows suit.
We’ve stopped valuing an investment in love because we’re too focused in all our other investments. Stopping to focus on love might knock us off our track to the top. That combined with the fact that admitting our focus is love or relationships seems trite in this day-and-age. We don’t value it personally because we don’t value it societally.
It’s more an observation than a criticism. I do it chronically. And I do wonder, when it’s all said and done, which instincts are smarter to trust: studied consumer logic or the x factor that is love?
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jessie you should totally read this book:
http://www.generationme.org/
it’s all about why exactly we are the way we are and it deals with SO many of the really interesting issues you discuss in your blog. i definitely recommend it.