daugen
Epic Contributor
Having nice stuff can make life easier, but living life is what should be celebrated. There's a growing trend amongst millennials that they value the experience more than the price paid; so there's some hope that our culture will get over the "more is more" kick we've been on since the 60's and get back to being human to one another.
I have a lot of people's jaws drop when they come into my shop for the first time. It's been collected over decades (and I'm not all that old!), but it's just stuff. Stuff that lets me make things, and I enjoy the making more than I enjoy the having the tool that lets me do it.
So here's a little insight on investing in stuff. I've had a couple really nice cars in my life. I found out that I would worry about their well being. I would park where they wouldn't likely get dings or scratched. I would worry about getting broken into when I was downtown at a concert and my head was not in the moment of enjoying the performance - I was thinking about my nice car in that dark parking lot 3 blocks away. I was attached to the process of owning them, they really owned me. In both cases (one happened when I was younger, the other happened a few years back when I finally got my "dream car" 540i), I got to resent those cars because of the control being concerned over them had on my mental state. I eventually sold them and got older, not completely crappy, but much less valuable vehicles that I didn't care all that much about - readily replaced if something were to happen (and I've been fully insured on all my cars). It's liberating!!!! So what you almost hit me! So what you sent your cart sailing across the parking lot! So what it's hailing small bricks outside and there's a tornado 3 blocks away! I was free of the bondage of those stupid possessions! I no longer cared if something bad or even inconsequential happened to my car.
I do love my tractor. It's changed my life and made things that were very difficult on my body much easier to accomplish and I don't have any more aches and pains from doing even more work than I ever could without it. But it's still just stuff.
well said. When Christmas becomes what you can give vs what you can receive, then life will also follow, what we give, what we do, how we live.
Tools are only enablers for us to do more with our lives. I admit to being a stuff person. Have a lot more tools than I have good knowledge to use them. But once in a while i have that need and it is remarkably satisfying to have the right tool for the job. I think there is some piling on here, let's just talk about tractors. 5070, come back.
last year there was a long thread on Cabela tractors, and a lot of second guessing about whether this whole experiment would last, how much value there was in it.
Looks like the negative folks were right, but you can't blame Cabela's for trying. They wanted to provide a premium buying experience, a little added cachet.
Basically trade on their name...
I never owned one but I bet lots of you owned Eddie Bauer Ford Explorers at one time. There were tons of them sold in New England.
Maybe Cabela's thought they could ride that kind of wave. They will likely sell their hardware off at cost and lose a pretty penny on the whole investment.