Discontentment Is Expensive
My mom and I had a conversation a few days ago about contentment and how it affects her life. She said to me, “being discontent has been quite expensive for me”. She meant that because she hasn’t had a great deal of confidence in her life, she has continually tried to find her identity in material things. She has never really found who she wants to portray herself as to the world everyday and just felt comfortable. When she sees friends, she sees all the things that they are that she is not and has a hard time with that instead of seeing herself for all the fabulous yet different things that she has to offer.
During that conversation she also said to me, “I want to learn how to be happy with what I am not”. Here she is, someone who has sought contentment and happiness in material things, and she’s not very happy. She’s not entirely unhappy but she is self aware enough to realize that there are things she wishes weren’t so in her life and she wants to make peace with who she is and stop feeling insecure and the need to be something she is not. She and my father have done well for themselves financially and so she has been able to literally afford the insecurity and the expense of her discontent, but that doesn’t make it any better. She has paid another price entirely that she can’t truly afford because being discontent means wasting precious time and energy in the short amount of time we’re given.
We talked in that conversation about my life when I was in my late teens and early twenties, up until just a couple of years ago, when I was in the same trap. I can look back with certainty and say that the unrest in my life then and the discontent I felt was because I was trying to keep up with and be accepted by people. I wanted people to like me and the way I tried to do that was to impress them with the way I looked and the things I had. I was defining myself in material goods. It was expensive and I was miserable.
As we spoke about that time of unhappiness in my life, she said that she can see over the past year or so that I have grown into what she wishes she had. She wants to be able to say “good enough” and live with it and stop striving for nicer clothes, a newer and different house, and all the things that she fell into the trap of during her life to try to impress others. Letting other people influence who we are, what we spend money on and how we define ourselves can lead to an endless path of spending if we’re not careful or aware enough to see it.
My mom also said to me in that conversation, “You aren’t just frugal, Em. You’re content. Frugal is just a result of your contentment. It would be really hard to be frugal and live simply the way you do if you weren’t confident and content enough to live it with a smile on your face.” I think that may pretty much sum up how frugality has become such a big part of my life in the past year or so. It fell into place once I found myself content and happy with what is. I stopped seeking happiness in what others think of me. I stopped letting others influence my tastes and choices. I started to see in others how they were living in that trap and instead of following them through the insecurity that leads to living a life that isn’t authentically mine, I chose to go a different way. I chose to not let what other people think of a small and simple life influence me and instead embraced it for all the beauty it presented to my life. I realized that material things make life comfortable but instead of striving for things that are beyond my reach, I know now to be appreciative of what I have. I can constantly improve, change, and even spend money. But, I have learned that doing so for anyone but myself is a sure way to live an expensive yet unhappy and unfulfilled life.











July 1st, 2008 at 6:57 am
what a sweet conversation! i too am like your mom and you. longing for that place of contentment with what we have. i think i’m truly on the road and maybe even half way, but still journeying along.
hope you are having a great vacation!
July 1st, 2008 at 9:08 am
This is a great one, Emily. It sounds like you may have really benefited your mom by simplifying and being content with your life. How cool of a reward is that?
“I chose to not let what other people think of a small and simple life influence me and instead embraced it for all the beauty it presented to my life.” Just gorgeous.
July 1st, 2008 at 9:18 am
wow, great post. This will really speak to a lot of people I think as I know a lot of people strive to be content through buying things, trying to live to someone else’s standard. Really scary that a lot of times the unhappiness and uncontentment in our lives is self-inflicted. I’m glad you are on your way to contentment.. congrats!
July 1st, 2008 at 3:31 pm
You know, discontentment can also be fattening. I guess when we feel that there’s something missing in our lives and fail to realize that what we need is to get in touch with who we really are and what we really want, we look for external ways to fill that void. And that can mean buying things, overeating, gambling, and so on.
July 1st, 2008 at 3:49 pm
You’re right, Marelisa. Expensive doesn’t just have to mean in terms of money. Discontent can cost one much more than dollars.
Thanks everyone for your input!
July 1st, 2008 at 5:41 pm
I can really relate to this. I just really wish I could have related to this about 10 years ago when I thought that I could buy contentment.
July 1st, 2008 at 6:10 pm
Like my daughter would say, “this one is a home run.” I agree with you whole heartedly on contentment. Appreciation of what you have is definitely the key to contentment. Would this notion transfer to a career? Just a thought…
July 2nd, 2008 at 4:09 pm
This is so very very true!
July 3rd, 2008 at 4:53 pm
My admiration for you grows daily.
You are inspiring.
July 5th, 2008 at 12:39 am
what an inspirational post! thank you for sharing. i hope to trim things down in my life that just “things” and rely solely on what i can afford to make me happy.
July 6th, 2008 at 10:51 am
[...] This Life: Discontentment is Expensive. It sure is. And potentially clutter-forming. Ask my [...]
July 7th, 2008 at 1:26 am
Just linked over from On Simplicity, and I’m very inspired by your writing! I like the quotes “I want to learn how to be happy with what I am not”. and “Frugal is just a result of your contentment.”
Very true.