Travel Can Make You Happier Than Buying Stuff
by Chris Christensen Add commentscategories: editorial
Originally uploaded by nattu
A recent study says that spending your money on possessions can make you happy, but that spending money on experiences such as travel will make you happier longer.
The study looked at 154 people enrolled at San Francisco State University, with an average age of about 25. Participants answered questions about a recent purchase — either material or experiential — they personally made in the last three months with the intention of making themselves happy.
While most people were generally happy with the purchase regardless of what it was, those who wrote about experiences tended to show a higher satisfaction at the time and after the experience had passed.
While 154 people don’t make a particularly statistically significant study, you can add my vote to the mix.
When I was a kid my family bought a small used red trailer. It was fourteen feet long, but you had to count the trailer hitch to get that length. It was very close quarters for a family of four but we took that trailer around much of the western U.S. and Canada. It was there that I developed my love for travel. Many of my friends growing up had never been outside of California and, even if we grant that it is quite a large and diverse state, that made the fact that I had been to exotic places like Wyoming and Alberta was special… at least to me.
I think it is safe to say that every toy that I bought at that age, any car my family had, every stitch of clothes I wore has worn out and been thrown out. But the memories of standing at Old Faithful, exploring Lewis and Clark Caverns or watching the men land on the moon for the first from a trailer park in Victoria B.C. have not lost any value over the years.













iNeverGetLost Team
Says:April 5th, 2009 at 5:12 pm
Such a good point, especially with the current economy! Travel gives you a chance to re-connect, experience things together, and create lasting memories. It can be a chance to educate, relax, unwind, and broaden the mind. Thanks for reminding us!
Off Airport Parking
Says:April 6th, 2009 at 7:05 pm
I think this is a great observation. Sometimes I’ll get memories of places I’ve travelled to, due to a similar smell or plant. I would say that often the possessions we do value most are due to the associations with loved ones or powerful experiences and not due to their monetary value.
Deb
Osman
Says:April 10th, 2009 at 9:03 am
So true! I have experienced this myself, so i have no doubt on this.