Posted by
Domenick Maglio on Tuesday, September 09, 2008 8:46:08 PM
INFLATED WALLETS, ARROGANT EGOS
By Domenick J. Maglio PhD Neo Traditionalist
The housing boom has turned into the mortgage bust.
Financial experts are stating that people with “upside-down” houses, houses
valued less than the mortgage, have no obligation to continue to pay. Their
advice is “walk away and in several years you can restore your credit.” It is
clear to these experts that money consideration trumps all other values.
Moral considerations of fulfilling one’s contract, keeping
one’s word have been tossed out the window. They have been replaced with “it is
all about money.” This is our new
amoral guide to existence. The more we measure ourselves in material wealth,
the less we follow what is right.
Our humility plummets while our arrogance skyrockets.
Our corrupting materialism has trickled down to the youngest
members of society. Children are blasé about even the most sophisticated gifts
losing interest shortly after unwrapping them. The more people of any age
receive something for nothing, the less gratitude and appreciation they can be
expected to feel.
Even people who break our laws entering our country
illegally demand the benefits of our social welfare system to which they are
not entitled or deserve. Our unaware citizens pay in full. K-12 education,
healthcare, subsidized housing, food stamps and college tuition for illegal
aliens. Again it is something for nothing. Too many of us unconsciously believe
our national treasury is limitless.
Disaster victims and our poorest citizens demand the
government do for them instead of the citizens doing for themselves. Too many
of us no longer feel it is our duty to help ourselves and our loved ones.
Instead we expect the government do it for us. Our entitlement mentality has
spread to every crevice of our nation.
Even financial mega corporations and affluent people who
make risky investments in the stock or home market want others to bail them
out. Financial decisions are being made under the assumption that they are
going to make money, not lose it for companies as well as individuals.
Presumptuously they believe since they made money in the past, the government
has the responsibility to guarantee it in the future. The social welfare or
“the government should save me from my poor but freely made choices” has caught
on with all segments of society, even the wealthy.
Recent college graduates feel they should start at the top
of the ladder. Their degrees should place them at the zenith of the pay scale,
give them a great office with no supervisors above them since they already know
everything. Their lack of professional experience is a non-issue. They have
been told by their instructors that they have the latest knowledge and methods
of doing any job. The professors’
hype and the parents’ material power have created an attitude of conceit that
is detrimental to every aspect of their lives.
When the thickness of our wallet makes us feel good about
ourselves, then the thinness of it makes us feel like losers. Many of us have
gotten into the habit of buying something to make us feel good. People will no
longer be able to use money power as their financial situation deteriorates.
They will suffer the loss of a falsely inflated identity. The inability to
continue to get a shopping adrenaline rush and no longer being able to hire
people to do our menial chores will breed resentment.
People are already so desperate they are willing to raid
their retirement funds. Using a debit card to withdraw their 401K is only
delaying the pain of not being able to buy whatever they want whenever they
want it. Eventually the person will deplete his nest egg and demand a social
security government bail out.
What goes up must come down to earth. Losing the security of
being rich on paper has a deflating effect that can reduce some to chronic
depression. The worship of the amount of money accumulated leads to temporary
arrogance and elation as well as inevitable disappointment. As the adage about
money clearly states, “you can’t take it with you.”
The best antidote to corrupting materialism is to stop
believing life is all about money. It is more about spiritual values: goodness,
kindness and doing God’s work in every way
Being rich in virtue can never be taken away no matter how
poor one may become in material goods.
Thick or thin wallets can be a measuring gage of our
monetary wealth but not of a life well lived. The measure of a rich man is not
how much he has but how little he needs and uses to live a good life.
Dr. Maglio is the author of Invasion Within and Essential Parenting. He is a psychotherapist and the
owner/director of Wider Horizons School.
Visit: www.drmaglio.com.