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An alternative to wealth: Rethinking what prosperity feels like

We usually recognise wealth through excess. More space than necessary, cupboards full of pretty things, devices replaced before they wear out and the quiet reassurance of never having to think too hard about limits. Abundance signals success because it suggests freedom: the ability to choose comfort. But wealth and wellbeing are not the same thing. A life built around abundance can still be fragile, dependent on steady income, reliable systems, and constant input to keep running smoothly. When those conditions shift, the sense of security they promised disappears.

This article looks at a different way of understanding wealth. Not as having more than enough, but as living in a way that continues to feel stable and generous even when circumstances change. This changes how we think about security, about time, and about the quiet forms of competence and connection that rarely show up in conversations about wealth.

Security beyond accumulation

For most of history, wealth was straightforward. You stored what you could because scarcity was real and recurring. Food, fuel, land: having more than you needed was a buffer against bad seasons.

Today the uncertainty feels less dramatic but more constant. It shows up in rising costs, delayed deliveries and systems that work until they don’t. Security, in that context, has less to do with stockpiling and more to do with flexibility.

Some households adapt easily: they solve their own problems. They shift routines, cook simply, repair what breaks, make do for a while without much stress. Others are organised around outsourcing problem-solving: efficient when everything runs smoothly, but fragile when it doesn’t. Money helps, of course, but sometimes stability comes from knowing you can handle small things yourself, or at least not panic when they happen.

Time that isn’t fully spoken for

There is another kind of wealth that only becomes visible once time loosens its grip. Many resource-heavy lifestyles promise convenience, yet they quietly require maintenance: planning, scheduling, coordinating and upgrading. (Read more about this in our article about minimalism as the best anti-stress medicine, since owning many things causes stress).

When time frees up, choices shift almost without noticing. Cooking becomes the obvious thing to do because there’s no hurry. Small repairs happen before they turn into problems. Even waiting starts to feel less like something is going wrong. None of this needs to be a moral stance; it’s simply what becomes possible when every hour isn’t already assigned.

And the atmosphere of a day shifts with it. Slower tasks invite conversation and familiar routines feel grounding instead of repetitive. We often assume ease comes from eliminating effort. But sometimes it comes from having enough margin that effort doesn’t dominate everything else. If you’re not rushing, a repair or a longer meal doesn’t feel like a burden. It feels proportionate. Even satisfying.

Access, familiarity, and the feeling of enough

We often buy things for reassurance more than for use. Objects promise readiness: the tool you might need someday, the appliance for a situation that rarely arrives. Ownership becomes a way of calming uncertainty and, in a sense, a way of pre-paying for future problems so money won’t have to solve them later.

But reassurance doesn’t always have to be purchased. Borrowing from a neighbour, sharing equipment, or simply knowing who to ask for help, can provide the same sense of security. Over time, these small networks quietly reduce how much money you need.

Familiarity works in a similar way. When you know how a washing machine sounds when something is slightly off, or how to tighten a loose hinge, small problems stop feeling expensive the moment they appear. Spending becomes a choice rather than an emergency response. The difference isn’t heroic self-sufficiency; it’s simply the absence of panic and with it, the feeling that you already have enough to handle what comes next.

What starts to feel rich

Status doesn’t disappear; it just changes shape. For a long time, newness was the clearest signal of progress: untouched surfaces, the latest iPhone, clothes without wear and tear. But once life feels secure in other ways, different qualities begin to stand out. Things that are used but still reliable, or homes that function without constant upgrading.

The immaterial things become more valuable. An evening that stretches without anyone watching the clock. A meal that easily makes room for one more person. These moments don’t look like wealth in the traditional sense, yet they carry a feeling of abundance all the same.

They depend on something subtle: time, attention, a little slack in the system. When every hour is optimised and every task measured against efficiency, that sense of quiet richness becomes harder to reach.

Enough

Money still matters. Financial stability protects against real risks, and nothing here argues otherwise. But once the basics are secure, the texture of daily life depends on more than accumulation alone. Familiarity, flexibility, and the people around us begin to matter just as much – sometimes more – in determining whether life actually feels stable, or even better: rich.

Seen from that angle, prosperity looks less like continual expansion and more like continuity: a life that keeps working when circumstances change, that doesn’t collapse at the first disruption, and that leaves enough space to enjoy it while it’s happening.

Florine started out as an art critic, but that turned out to not be quite her thing. So, she did what any sensible person would do - packed her life (and family) into a tiny campervan and roamed the planet for seven years. Now back in the Netherlands, she’s juggling life as a strategic advisor for a Dutch non-profit, while also writing for magazines and platforms. When she’s not typing away, you’ll probably find her treasure-hunting at thrift stores to jazz up her tiny house by the sea. Or wandering outdoors, because apparently sitting still isn’t really her vibe.

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