Mark Manson Profile picture
Sep 23, 2020 9 tweets 2 min read Read on X
1/ What’s cheap is often more expensive. What does this mean exactly? Let me explain.
2/ My wife and I are both conservative with money. We’re always looking for the bargain, the discount, the special one-time sale. Last year, we bought a house. And when you buy a house, there’s a lot of stuff you have to spend money on that comes along with a house.
3/ Contractors, accountants, designers, lawyers, and so on. Sadly, we learned the hard way—over and over again—that the money you save by hiring the less expensive contractor or the newer designer ends up costing you far more in their mistakes.
4/ Cheaper furniture becomes damaged or breaks more easily, costing you more to repair/replace it. Cheaper plumbing costs you more when a pipe bursts. And a cheaper decorator costs you much more when it turns out he measured half the stuff incorrectly.
5/ I started to realize that this is actually true for a lot of things in life. You wouldn’t want to bargain hunt on a brain surgeon, for instance—or any doctor, for that matter.
6/ You could argue that you shouldn’t cheap out on food—as the lack of nutrition from cheap, poorly-produced food will more than make up for itself in health problems later on.
7/ Even clothes, the cheaper the fabric, the more often you’ll spend money replacing them.
8/ Spanish-speaking readers told me that they have a saying for this phenomenon in their language: *lo barato sale caro*, or “the cheap turns out expensive.” We could use a saying like that in English. So here you go, let’s make it a thing: *What’s cheap is often more expensive*.
9/ Do you have an example of how cheap ended up costing you more?

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More from @IAmMarkManson

Apr 28
In 2022, I decided to give up alcohol.

I started with two months, and it’s turned into two years.

Here are 7 unexpected benefits I got from quitting alcohol👇 Image
1. I’m more emotionally stable. When I was drinking, I’d get crankier, more excited, more embarrassed or feel more guilty for the 2-3 days after. Even if it was only a couple. I’m way more chill now.
2. I’m more productive. Less energy spent trying to manage my emotions is energy that can be invested into my writing and recording. I’ve had an unexpected boon for my work.
Read 10 tweets
Apr 25
On the surface, the rise in workplace burnout makes no sense.

Despite choosing our hours, working where we want and taking meetings in our underwear, we're suffering burnout more than ever.

Are we just whiny & weak, or is there something deeper going on?

Let’s investigate👇 Image
Burnout is defined as chronic workplace stress, or constant feelings of energy depletion & exhaustion.

In a recent Deloitte survey, 77% of workers said they'd experienced it in their current job—yet, this is despite the majority saying they're passionate about their current job. Image
So if people love their jobs, why are they so burnt out from them?

The non-obvious thing to consider here is the friction that’s been removed with the shift to digital work.
Read 14 tweets
Apr 12
When I was young, I dealt with serious social anxiety. Then I got over it.

Since then, I’ve spent 15 years working with 1,000s of people who also struggle with anxiety.

This is what works (a thread) 👇 Image
The increase in adults struggling with Social Anxiety Disorder is out of control. It’s the second highest diagnosed anxiety disorder, affecting 15 million Americans each year.

That’s 15 million people giving way too many fucks. Image
Socially anxious behavior shows up in a ton of ways, everything from avoiding situations where you could draw attention, to feeling self-conscious in very normal, everyday situations, to awkwardly wondering what to do with your hands all the time.

But did you know that there’s a psychological phenomenon underpinning all socially anxious behavior?
Read 9 tweets
Apr 4
Here’s a comparison between one man—who survived four Nazi concentration camps—and today’s young people, who seem barely able to survive anything 👇
According to a recent Harvard study, 50% of the mental health challenges suffered by young adults come down to a lack of direction. Or, in simple terms, people don’t know what to give a fuck about. Image
It’s long been understood that having meaning and purpose gives humans a sense of autonomy and self-worth—that it’s the bedrock of a mentally healthy and happy person. That’s not new.
Read 8 tweets
Mar 15
Why you shouldn't necessarily take life advice from rich people (a thread)👇 Image
Have you ever noticed how many rich people advocate for a balanced, healthy and happy lifestyle—after they’re rich?

You know, after they've spent 10 years grinding, failing, suffering and eating Big Macs for breakfast?
Humans have a tendency to misplace cause and effect.

You'll see rich people notice improvement in their lives and their productivity when they start doing things like morning yoga and drinking chia seed smoothies for breakfast...
Read 6 tweets
Mar 9
Today is my 40th birthday. Here are all the things that I know at 40 which I wish I knew at 20.

Starting with…

1. Your relationship with others is a direct reflection of your relationship with yourself. If you treat yourself poorly, then you will unconsciously seek out and tolerate others who treat you poorly. If you treat yourself with dignity and respect, then you will only tolerate others who treat you with dignity and respect.

Get right with yourself. Get right with the world.
2. The only way to feel better about yourself is to do things worth feeling good about. Respect is earned, not given.

3. The only failure is not trying. The only rejection is not asking. The only mistake is not risking anything.

Success and failure are fuzzy concepts that only exist in your brain before you do something, not after. After the fact, everything will have some mixture of both success and failure within them. And the only real failure is doing nothing.
4. No one is coming to save you. No single thing will solve all of your problems. No goal, no achievement, no relationship will ever fix you. You will always feel mildly inadequate, and somewhat dissatisfied with your life. Nothing is wrong with you for feeling this way. On the contrary, it may be the most normal thing about you.
Read 34 tweets

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