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Stuffocation: Why We've Had Enough of Stuff and Need Experience More Than Ever
Stuffocation Why We've Had Enough of Stuff and Need Experience More Than Ever Author:James Wallman Stuffocation is a movement manifesto for ?experiential? living, a call to arms to stop accumulating stuff and start accumulating experiences, and a road map for a new way forward with the potential to transform our lives. — Reject materialism. Embrace experientialism. Live more with less. — — Stuffocation is the most pressing problem of the twent... more »y-first century. We have more stuff than we could ever need, and it isn?t making us happier. It?s bad for the planet. It?s cluttering up our homes. It?s making us stressed?and it might even be killing us.
A rising number of us are already turning our backs on all-you-can-get consumption. We are choosing access over ownership, and taking our business to companies like Zipcar, Spotify, and Netflix. Fed up with materialism, we are ready for a new way forward.
Trend forecaster James Wallman traces our obsession with stuff back to the original Mad Men, who first created desire through advertising. He interviews anthropologists studying the clutter crisis, economists searching for new ways of measuring progress, and psychologists who link stuffocation to declining well-being. And he introduces us to the innovators who are already living more consciously and with more meaning by choosing experience over stuff.
Experientialism does not mean giving up all of our possessions. It is a solution that is less extreme but equally fundamental. It?s about transforming what we value. Stuffocation is a paradigm-shifting look at our habits and an inspiring call for for living more with less. It?s the one important book you won?t be able to live without.
What People Are Saying About Stuffocation
?In Stuffocation, James Wallman offers a deeply important message by weaving contemporary social science into very engaging stories. Reading the book is such a pleasure that you hardly recognize you?re being told that you should change how you live your life.??Barry Schwartz, author of The Paradox of Choice
?With a sociologist?s eye and a storyteller?s ear, James Wallman takes us on a tour of today?s experience economy from the perspective not of businesses, nor even of consumers per se, but of everyday people. In doing so, he identifies the rise of a new value system among those who are consciously replacing materialism with what he rightly calls experientialism. Spot on.?b
?Stuffocation explains how less but better stuff and space can lead to more time, more experiences, more connecting with people, and therefore more happiness. Designed right, small is the new big.??Graham Hill, founder, LifeEdited.com and treehugger.com« less