
A life is most commonly measured by the equities a person leaves when they die.
At the end of one’s life, a person may leave their family with a 2.1 million estate after having worked 180,000 hours in the office and tolerated 62,000 arguments with their spouse.
In the great western ‘pursuit of happiness’, even from birth, we are conformed to believe that the key to benign happiness is a sense of health and wealth. In an evermore consumerist society, the line between enough and excess has been distorted and now, the average person has lost the meaning of true happiness.
Throughout life our happiness is measured by our income, material possessions and objects we acquire over our many year as consumers. If a material possession are considered to be despicable then is the means to which it is measured ‘our spiritual happiness’ not dispensable in itself?
Rather our happiness is immeasurable and only remembered by those to which we have no ownership over and those that are untouchable.
At the end of ones life, they may leave their family with $2 and still worked 180,00 hours of some cotton fields, yet smiled 62,000 times.
Can you truly buy a smile?