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I just now got some advertising email from eBay with the heading "explore eBay Canada your way" and then it listed the things they thought I might want: cell phones, hockey cards, lingerie, sleeveless dresses, flip flops.

It seems extraordinary to me the way I so little want any of the things on their list. I sometimes fear I am more materialistic than I want to be, when I think of all the things I want1; but really, there are an extraordinary number of things in this world that I don't want and can't imagine wanting. Which is good, on the whole.2

~ ~ ~
1 Which can pretty much be summed up as: books, more books, comics, some DVDs, and travel.

2 This being said, I constantly surprise myself with the new things I find to love. Who'd have thought, a year ago, that I'd want - and get - red Converse shoes?

Date: 2007-06-05 05:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kikibug13.livejournal.com
Red ones? YAY!!!

*likes flip-flops for the season herself*

Date: 2007-06-05 07:15 pm (UTC)
ext_120533: Deseine's terracotta bust of Max Robespierre (Default)
From: [identity profile] silverwhistle.livejournal.com
There is nothing wrong with being materialistic about books, DVDs and travel. These are useful, mind-expanding things. I couldn't live without them.

Date: 2007-06-06 07:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] walkingowl.livejournal.com
Ah, my: eBay and MySpace and The Gap and... a continual narrowing of what is available, what is "hip," and what will allow a person to continue to dwell in the safe middle ground of "normal person." Listen to the little bitty drips of ironicalness, oh my. I have recently run into the concept of "conformist non-conformists," which is to say, those people who loudly and aggressively reject what once would have been called "square" and instead loudly and aggressively embrace an alternative set of experiences and material goods, to the point of assuming the very same attitudes they say the "squares" espouse, attitudes that exclude as invalid any life choices but the ones they themselves have adopted. Just a thought. (There was a tv commercial a few years ago, several young people sitting outside complaining about how they keep getting forced to follow the crowd, how they are not allowed to be themselves. They are all wearing the latest clothes from The Gap. They end their conversation, on which we are eavesdropping for commercial purposes, by saying with great disdain, "Quit telling me how to dress! Show me the khakis!!" ...thus co-opting themselves with not only trendy, commercialized "pre-programmed coolness," but also tying themselves to current movie buzz-lines as well. Good going! Yes, by all means, be an individual!)

Actually, I'm now having a chuckle imagining you wearing a sleeveless dress and trendy flip-flops while you use your cellphone to check your bids on eBay hockey card auctions.

The red Converse shoes, on the other hand, are totally logical.

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