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Post-consumerism is often suggesting that there is a growing willingness to assert that well-being, as distinct from material success, is the aim of life. Post-consumerism can also be viewed as moving beyond the current model of addictive consumerism.[1] This personal and societal strategy utilizes each individual's core values to identify the "satisfaction of enough for today."[2] The intent and outcome of this basic strategy to date has "reached people where they are rather than simply where we are."[3]
^De Graaf, John et al (2014, Third Edition). ′′Affluenza: How Overconsumption Is Killing Us and How to Fight Back′′, p. 200. Berrett-Koehler Publishers, San Francisco. ISBN1609949277.
^Holst, Carol (2007). ′′Get Satisfied: How Twenty People Like You Found the Satisfaction of Enough′′, p. xviii. Easton Studio Press, Connecticut. ISBN0974380687.