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Should I buy it?
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🔮 Get Your Free Tarot Reading ✈ Or join free daily readings on Telegram →Something caught your eye, you've been thinking about it, and you're here asking the universe for permission. Should I buy it? is usually asked when you already want it — the question is whether you can justify it.
The most reliable test: wait 48 hours. Not because delayed gratification is virtuous on its own, but because impulse purchases almost always lose their appeal within two days if they weren't worth buying. The things still on your mind 48 hours later tend to be the ones that will actually deliver value.
Buy it if: You've wanted it for a sustained period, not just since seeing it 20 minutes ago. It solves a real problem or fills a genuine gap. You can afford it without meaningful stress. Consider cost-per-use, not just sticker price — a $200 thing you use weekly is cheaper than a $30 thing you use once.
Don't buy it if: You're buying it to feel better in a moment of boredom or stress. You already own something that does the same job. The excitement is about the buying, not the having. You'll feel guilty after.
Notice whether the fortune teller's answer makes you feel relieved or disappointed — that reaction often tells you more than the reasoning does.
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The 48-hour rule: add to cart, wait two days, then decide. Most impulse purchases feel less urgent after 48 hours. For bigger purchases, extend to two weeks.
Yes, if you can genuinely afford it. Financial wellbeing includes space for discretionary spending on things that bring joy. The question is whether the joy justifies the cost, not whether joy is an acceptable reason.
It's affordable if buying it doesn't require skipping something that matters more — savings, bills, planned experiences — and if you wouldn't stress about the expense a week later.
If the item is frequently discounted, waiting is rational. If it's a limited item or something you've been considering for months, a hypothetical future sale shouldn't indefinitely delay the decision.
Often rooted in money beliefs absorbed early — that spending is irresponsible or that enjoyment must be earned. These beliefs are worth examining separately from the individual purchase decision.