Hello and welcome to a weekend episode of Daily English —where we try to grow, in English and in life. Let me start with a question:

 When was the last time you bought something… hoping it would make you feel more enough? Not happier. Just… less left out.

Today’s idea is simple: Sometimes, we don’t buy things because we need them.
 We buy them because we want to belong. To feel seen. To feel part of something.

There’s a concept called consumer identity.

It means: We use things to say who we are. Our clothes. Our phones. Our brands.

They whisper: “This is me.” “This is my place.”

And deep inside, we’re saying: “Please let me fit in.”

Often, we’re not buying objects. We’re buying a feeling. And for a moment… it works.Until it fades.

Not long ago, belonging came from people —from being called by name, having a seat kept for you, being missed if you didn’t show up, and from shared beliefs, traditions, and religions.

Today, belonging is sold to us instead. You feel you belong to a community when you buy a particular brand or product. You want to buy the feeling of belonging

But Buying belonging doesn’t just cost money. It slowly costs peace.

Small emotional buys become: stress, debt, that tight feeling when you check your balance.

And here’s something important to remember:

 That money you spend? You earned it with your precious time. Your energy. Your life.

You don’t need to waste what you worked so hard for just to buy a feeling that will disappear in a few days.

Because when the excitement fades, The emptiness returns.

So we scroll again. And buy again. For the feeling.

So next time you feel the urge to buy something you don’t need, hesitate for a moment and  choose a deep, sincere connection instead.

A message. A call. A quiet deep moment with yourself. Just once. And notice the difference.

Let’s buy more intentionally this year — for our finances, and for our peace of mind.”Thank you for being here today.  See you tomorrow.