The Luxury Paradox

Read this page, it’s full of gems!

The luxury paradox states that the more expensive something is, the less you use it. So if you had a Ferrari, it would normally sit in your garage. But if you had a Honda, it would get used a lot.

I bought some shoes a few years back that at the time felt expensive for me. I have since bought more expensive shoes that I (paradoxically it would seem) use quite often, because these more expensive shoes are built to last decades (I’m not even lying, R.M. Williams boots are built to last). This purchasing of new shoes meant the older ones lost their perceptive value, and therefore began to feel cheap. By then I felt it was fine to wear those old shoes more often, and so I do.

In other words, if you buy something expensive and don’t use it, buy something even more expensive! Then you’ll use it (of course this is a joke, you would have fallen to the Hedonic Treadmill, but it proves a point).

ENJOYED THIS? HAVE MORE.

MOUNTAINS OF WISDOM

Subscribe to my yamabushi newsletter

RECENT BLOG POSTS

How to benefit the most from reading in an L2
More on the Zone of Proximal Development
Weird Japan

YAMABUSHI BLOG POSTS

brown wooden arrow signed
Standards and Boundaries
The Pareto Principle at work
confident man wearing black hat and white long sleeve shirt
You’re only fooling yourself

RANDOM POSTS

man in white shirt using macbook pro
Life Getting In The Way?
Opportunities for growth
Bureaucracy in Japan
Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Get In Touch

Sakata City, Yamagata, Japan 

tim@timbunting.com

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
Scroll to Top