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Spending is supposed to solve problems, but it often creates new ones: clutter you cannot face, upgrades you did not need, and that familiar twinge of "why did I buy this?" Spending with Dignity is a practical guide to making purchases that fit your values, your space, and your real life - so you can buy less, enjoy more, and regret nothing (or at least, far less often). It is not about being stingy. It is about building standards that protect your attention and make your money feel like an ally rather than a leak.
Ravi Khatekar shows how to replace impulse and status-driven spending with clear personal rules you can actually follow. You will learn mindful spending without moralising, create simple purchase rules for common situations, and use cost per use thinking to separate bargains from expensive mistakes. You will also build anti clutter habits that start before you tap "buy", design planned friction to support impulse buying control, and schedule planned splurges that deliver joy without triggering backlash.
The book is for anyone who feels pulled between modern convenience and modern overwhelm: people tired of repeated "small leaks", drifting subscriptions, and the low hum of spending anxiety. With a straightforward subscription audit method, realistic review routines, and tools for repairing, returning, and exiting ownership cleanly, Spending with Dignity helps you spend in ways you can respect tomorrow - with fewer piles, fewer regrets, and more satisfaction from what you choose to keep.

Spending with Dignity

SKU: 9789377785468
$27.99 Regular Price
$21.33Sale Price
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  • Ravi Khatekar writes about everyday decision-making: the small choices that quietly shape a life. His work is guided by a simple belief that money is not just arithmetic, but attention, space, and self-respect expressed in receipts and routines. He is drawn to practical frameworks that work on an ordinary Tuesday, not just in moments of motivation, and he prefers tools that reduce shame rather than intensify it. Ravi grew up around the idea that dignity is visible in how you care for what you already own: repairing before replacing, buying with intention, and resisting the pressure to prove yourself through possessions. That sensibility echoes older traditions found across many communities, where mending, hand-me-downs, and making-do were not trends but normal life - shaped by scarcity, war-time rationing memories, and the plain fact that waste costs more than money. Today, he explores how those enduring values can coexist with modern convenience, without sliding into either deprivation or excess. When he is not writing, Ravi is interested in how design and marketing influence behaviour, and how simple household systems can protect time and reduce friction. He aims to help readers spend with clarity, enjoy what they choose, and feel at home with their choices.

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