Why do you think people buy loads of things, often needless, senseless or even useless? I've thought the answer is plain to see. If you can control your outgoings, it implies that you are not an addict. I assume, merchants were right when they introduced the term window-shopping. I must confess to being sometimes a window shopper because I do the shopping religiously and get a buzz out of it. But if you fail to do it up brown, you must stop your money leaks perforce.
If you think, looking at the pictures, that all these bags, occupying a stand hanger, belong to different owners, you've got another think coming. It's me, the only owner of them. My latest crush on knapsacks takes its toll on my savings. Please, don't take me wrong though -- I am not away with fairies Temporarily as I hope, I have a soft spot for this little pleasure of wearing small backpacks, until the date with another item.
Consumerism, greedy big eyes and an itching palm make people think up suitable excuses for having a new buy and cluttering up free space in their houses. Gradually, this takes a form of addiction in a way when even with the expert handling you cannot get out of the woods with little to no issues. You'll need more space for stuff, more and more money to buy more furniture to store the stuff, a bigger flat or house. You'll worship the stuff and work for it. It will definitely send you into tiswas . That's real due to you're going to run out of money unless the penny drops.
In a nutshell, I'm calling for a common-sense approach when you are ready to pay for one more unnecessary item on the spur of the moment As an old adage goes 'a penny saved is a penny earned', you'd better put some money aside.
If my article has given you something to ponder on, I would like to know what you are thinking. A penny for your thoughts!
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Erene I
November 9