Defining 'enough' through reason and dignity rather than endless accumulation, breaking the psychological cycle of perpetual wanting.
Consumer capitalism teaches that more is always better, but Zera Yacob's reason-centered philosophy asks a different question: What is sufficient for a dignified life? This radical shift in budgeting removes the treadmill of accumulation. Instead of asking 'How much can I earn and spend?' ask 'What do I genuinely need for health, security, growth, and flourishing?' Once you define sufficiency—grounded in reason rather than advertising or social comparison—budgeting becomes liberating. You stop chasing upgrades you don't need, work becomes less desperate, and resources freed from excess consumption can serve justice or security. Sufficiency is neither ascetic deprivation nor conspicuous waste; it's the rational middle ground Zera Yacob advocated.
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