That “new phone / new shoes / new car” high?
It’s real. It’s also built to fade.
The first hit
When you buy something exciting, your brain gets:
- novelty
- a sense of progress
- a little status boost
It feels like life just jumped a level.
The slide back to normal
Then hedonic adaptation kicks in: your brain quietly moves the goalposts.
- Yesterday’s upgrade becomes today’s “normal”.
- You stop noticing the details that thrilled you.
- The object turns into background.
Your mood drifts back to its old baseline.
So the next time you feel low, your brain suggests:
“Maybe you need… another upgrade.”
How to hack it
Instead of chasing the next purchase:
- Spend on experiences you’ll remember (trips, learning, shared moments).
- Or spend on systems that change your days long-term (better sleep setup, tools that remove friction).
And when you do buy something?
- Pause and squeeze it: notice what you like about it, on purpose, for a few days.
The rush isn’t the problem.
Forgetting what you already have is.
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