Instead, they only see the material things that they feel that they need. They are trained by society to want these materials objects, and they generally do not even understand why they feel this way. They only know that this is the way things are 'supposed to be.' While others who are not as materialistic try to tell them differently, and live with fewer possessions and more time, those who are working to make money to buy things continue in their vicious circle. It perpetuates itself by being passed on to their children, who also see only the material benefits of making a lot of money so that they can have the best homes, the most expensive cars, and all of the latest technological gadgetry that money can buy.
For many of these people, they do not realize until it is too late that there is much more to life than money, and that power and material things really do not make a person's life. Some never realize it at all. For those who realize it in time, though, the options for recreation and leisure are very abundant. There are so many activities that can be entered into with little to no money, and people who become aware of how much money they are spending and how much time they are working to afford things that they do not really need have the chance to change their lives and the lives of their families.
It seems as though what de Graff (2003) is really trying to say is that there is so much more to life...
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