We chase things.
Phones, watches, cars, clothes, cakes, beds…
We always think: the more expensive, the better.
But life has a way of humbling us.
Because the truth is:
More costly doesnβt always mean more valuable.
A β±3,300 phone and a β±141,000 phone can both stay silent when no one calls.
A β±1,600 watch and a β±300,000 watch? Same time.
A β±455,000 car and a β±33.5M luxury car? Same traffic, same road.
A β±1,200 mattress and an β±86,000 bed? Useless if you still canβt sleep.
A β±200 cake and a β±25,000 cake can both taste empty if thereβs no joy in the celebration.
A β±2,000 camera and an β±80,000 camera make no difference when thereβs no moment worth capturing.
A β±300 book and a β±5,000 book? The same if you never read or understood it.
A β±200 pair of sneakers and a β±20,000 pair can both protect your feet just the same.
A β±100 shirt and an β±8,000 branded shirt both cover the same nakedness.
You get the point.
Thereβs a limit to what money can give.
And beyond that, what matters is rarely found in receipts.
So before you chase the next big thing, pause.
Ask yourself:
Do I really need this?
Or is it just a prettier version of the same emptiness?
When the glitter fades,
itβs not about how much it costs.
Itβs about how much it means.
ππ’ππππ πΎππ ππ πππ π±πππ β’ π½πΊππΎπ.πππππΌ.π»π
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Itβs Not About the Price
From phones to clothes to cars, price tags shine loud. But when the glitter fades, whatβs left worth holding on to?