Thoreau Tells Us To Cultivate Poverty Analysis

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Ever found something in the trash and taken it home? While many partake in dumpster diving leisurely, there are a special few who get everything they need from garbage: clothes, electronics, and even food. "Cultivate poverty... like a garden herb. Don't trouble yourself to get new things whether clothes or friends," (Thoreau, Generation 25). This brilliant quote relates very closely to the freeganism movement which fights wastefulness in our consumerist society. When Thoreau tells us to "cultivate poverty" (25), he is telling us to enjoy what we have, even if it may not be much. When you are unconcerned with material things like clothes, you open yourself to new ways of experiencing life, past the physical elements. When he talks about new friends, I think he is expressing how as humans we have the tendency to act differently to impress new people. This concern for the opinion of others needs to be shed to get to the most important parts of life. Henry David Thoreau stressed the importance of living simply and using your human abilities to get the sustenance, whether spiritual or physical, that you need to survive. …show more content…

Finding myself copying the styles and mind sets of those around me, I realize I need to start being an individual. The pressures of society are very heavy on any teenage girl, and I surely feel the strain of conformity. Out of fear of being judged, I often shy away from sharing my opinions and values to others. When these beliefs are the keystone of my life, it seems nonsensical to hide them. I believe that this quote has more meaning to us now then it did in Thoreau's time. Being a consumerist society has created a plague of wastefulness that has influenced our homes and cities. We can all learn to have more simple lives and use what we

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