Dinero, capital, bienes, patrimonio, ¿acaso es necesario para la felicidad? Estoy de acuerdo en que se puede vivir bien o “mejor” si cuentas con unos recursos o con una seguridad suficiente para poder conseguirlos. Pero hay muchas maneras de conseguirlo. Se puede mendigar, cuando no quede más remedio, y no se lo deseo a nadie jamás. Se puede trabajar, como un derecho universal común para obtener una remuneración de ello. Se puede heredar, por supuesto, si tu familia posee títulos, ahorros, puedes nacer con un status económico y/o social más elevado. También se puede obtener de forma fraudulenta, y ya conocemos diversas formas que no voy a extenderme explicando.
El caso es que, tengas más o menos, vengas de la familia que vengas, trabajes en un cargo superior o inferior, o delinques para conseguirlo, el dinero te afecta y transforma como persona, de una forma u otra. Es una visión quizás defectuosa el pensar que a más patrimonio, más se corrompe nuestra sociabilidad. Cuando digo “transforma” me refiero a que de la manera que tú trates y consigas esas ganancias dependerán muchos otros factores de tu personalidad. Y, lo más importante, sea como sea el caso, disfruta responsablemente, no vivas por encima de tus posibilidades, comparte y se feliz con lo que tienes; es mejor que estar continuamente esperando elevar la cuantía.
Money, equity, goods, heritage, is it really necessary to happiness? I agree we could live “better” having some goods or security funds to get them. But there are many ways to get them. You can be begging at the streets, when there is actually nothing else, I don’t want this for anyone. You can find a job, must be an universal human right, in order to obtain your wages. You can also inherit, if you come from a noble family or any similar, you are born in a higher quality of life and/or currency. Furthermore, you can have the money with dishonest ways, there are lots of them, and I will not expend my time talking about that.
Coming back to the topic, whether you have more or you have less, you come from one or another family, you work as an employer or employee, or even steal the money, it affects and changes you somehow. Maybe it is a common mistake thinking that more equity corrupts our sociability. When I say “changes” it means that how you obtain and treat those earnings may in fact create or shape different factors of the personality. Moreover, either way your example is, enjoy responsibly, don’t try to live over your competences, share and be happy on what you have and what you have got so far. That is better than being steadily hoping to increase the status.
El caso es que, tengas más o menos, vengas de la familia que vengas, trabajes en un cargo superior o inferior, o delinques para conseguirlo, el dinero te afecta y transforma como persona, de una forma u otra. Es una visión quizás defectuosa el pensar que a más patrimonio, más se corrompe nuestra sociabilidad. Cuando digo “transforma” me refiero a que de la manera que tú trates y consigas esas ganancias dependerán muchos otros factores de tu personalidad. Y, lo más importante, sea como sea el caso, disfruta responsablemente, no vivas por encima de tus posibilidades, comparte y se feliz con lo que tienes; es mejor que estar continuamente esperando elevar la cuantía.
Money, equity, goods, heritage, is it really necessary to happiness? I agree we could live “better” having some goods or security funds to get them. But there are many ways to get them. You can be begging at the streets, when there is actually nothing else, I don’t want this for anyone. You can find a job, must be an universal human right, in order to obtain your wages. You can also inherit, if you come from a noble family or any similar, you are born in a higher quality of life and/or currency. Furthermore, you can have the money with dishonest ways, there are lots of them, and I will not expend my time talking about that.
Coming back to the topic, whether you have more or you have less, you come from one or another family, you work as an employer or employee, or even steal the money, it affects and changes you somehow. Maybe it is a common mistake thinking that more equity corrupts our sociability. When I say “changes” it means that how you obtain and treat those earnings may in fact create or shape different factors of the personality. Moreover, either way your example is, enjoy responsibly, don’t try to live over your competences, share and be happy on what you have and what you have got so far. That is better than being steadily hoping to increase the status.