i mean even if the house wont sell at least i'll have buttoned-up a bunch of stuff i should have done forever ago lol
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Random Thread V2.0
Collapse
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
-
Originally posted by Miroteknik View Posti mean even if the house wont sell at least i'll have buttoned-up a bunch of stuff i should have done forever ago lol
Comment
-
Quote "While other generations certainly saw plenty of advertising, we have social media on top of that. And social media — be it influencers or friends — can up spending, says psychologist Erika Martinez of L.A.-based psychotherapy firm Envision Wellness. Indeed, a recent survey from Allianz Life showed that more than half of millennials and more than one in four Gen Xers had spent money they hadn’t planned to because of something they saw on social media. “The peer pressure [to spend] from social media is overwhelmingly powerful,” Hockenbury says.
We’re also simply more focused on our stuff and how it reflects upon us: “As a society we are experiencing an increase in conditional self-worth, basing our self-worth on external conditions, such as the car we drive or the name of our alma mater,” says Lombardo. “This propels greater spending in a (subconscious) effort to feel better about ourselves.”"
Comment
-
Originally posted by Miroteknik View PostQuote "While other generations certainly saw plenty of advertising, we have social media on top of that. And social media — be it influencers or friends — can up spending, says psychologist Erika Martinez of L.A.-based psychotherapy firm Envision Wellness. Indeed, a recent survey from Allianz Life showed that more than half of millennials and more than one in four Gen Xers had spent money they hadn’t planned to because of something they saw on social media. “The peer pressure [to spend] from social media is overwhelmingly powerful,” Hockenbury says.
We’re also simply more focused on our stuff and how it reflects upon us: “As a society we are experiencing an increase in conditional self-worth, basing our self-worth on external conditions, such as the car we drive or the name of our alma mater,” says Lombardo. “This propels greater spending in a (subconscious) effort to feel better about ourselves.”"
Comment
Comment