Eric Hoffer as quoted in James D. Koerner, Hoffer's America (Open Court, 1973), p. 25:
I need little to be contented. Two meals a day, tobacco, books that hold my interest, and a little writing each day. This to me is a full life.
And this after a full day at the San Francisco waterfront unloading ships. And we're talking cheap tobacco smoked after a meal of Lipton soup and Vienna sausage in a humble apartment in a marginal part of town. Hoffer, who had it tough indeed, had the wisdom to be satisfied with what he had.
Call it the paradox of plenty: those who had to struggle in the face of adversity developed character and worth, while those with opportunities galore and an easy path became slackers and malcontents and 'revolutionaries.' Adding to the paradox is that those who battled adversity learned gratitude while those who had it handed to them became ingrates.
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