You can buy happiness (and it's cheap) How one woman radically simplified her life and how you can too

Tammy Strobel, 1978-

Book - 2012

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Subjects
Published
Novato, Calif. : New World Library [2012]
Language
English
Main Author
Tammy Strobel, 1978- (-)
Physical Description
xi, 209 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781608680832
  • Gratitude
  • Introduction: Rethinking Normal
  • Part 1. The Paradox of Stuff
  • Chapter 1. Buying Things Will Not Make You Happy
  • Chapter 2. The Stuff You Own Owns You
  • Part 2. Finding Happiness through Simple Living
  • Chapter 3. Changing Your Relationship with Stuff
  • Chapter 4. The Power of Debt
  • Chapter 5. Sell What You Can, Give the Rest Away
  • Chapter 6. The Joy of the Small House
  • Chapter 7. Reclaiming Work
  • Part 3. Buying Happiness
  • Chapter 8. Time Is the Only Real Wealth
  • Chapter 9. Money vs. Experiences
  • Chapter 10. Relationships Matter, Not Things
  • Chapter 11. The Art of Community Building
  • Chapter 12. The Power of Tiny Pleasures
  • Epilogue: Love Life, Not Stuff
  • Endnotes
  • Resources and Further Reading
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This cheerful handbook offers the emotional and practical lessons Strobel learned while radically downsizing her living space, disposing of most of her possessions, and simplifying her lifestyle. Through her RowdyKittens blog, Strobel and her husband have shared their transition from a generous two-bedroom apartment in 2004 to the TV-free, refrigerator-free, 128-square-foot house-on-wheels parked in a corner of a friend's Portland, Ore., yard. She makes a persuasive argument for simplification and is careful to offer advice not only to Small Living movement radicals but to anyone looking to "right-size" their life. Social relationships, she argues, should be both the core of personal satisfaction and a way to share resources. Additionally, Strobel urges budgeting for experiences rather than objects and finding ways to spend less time commuting and working just to pay for unnecessary goods. A list of "micro-actions" that anyone can do-like the "100 Thing Challenge" or the "one in, one out rule"-is offered to aid in re-evaluating one's relationship with space and ownership. Although her personal choices may seem extreme, the environmental politics and magnitude of change Strobel asks of her reader is distinctly moderate, making this a practical book even for those who only want to live a little bit lighter. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved