When is bigger not better




















Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Is the "Bigger is not always better" correct? Ask Question. Asked 4 years, 3 months ago. Active 4 years, 3 months ago. Viewed times. During a conversation with my friend, I said I have a big house He replied Bigger is not always better Shouldn't he have said Big is not always good since there's no comparison in what I said?

Improve this question. Bigger is not always better sounds more natural and idiomatic. But this was different. Clarence pushed me over the edge. He was my neighbor. And I liked him. The constant smirk of a smile got under my skin and into my heart. Our relationship introduced a barrage of new questions for my life: How do I love my neighbor when my neighbor has no front door or even walls?

My previous worldview assumed my neighbor would be living in the same context as me: in a home. I thought the fabric on our couch or our dinner choices may be different, but I never really imagined my neighbor without a refrigerator or a shower.

With one doorbell ring, all the ways I looked at my day-to-day life instantly changed. What he saw looking through my front door was abundance. I have not one but two living areas that anyone can actually see from the front door. I have air conditioning for those hot days in Atlanta. I have a toilet and shower in each of my two bathrooms and I even have a washer and dryer for my clothes. And speaking of clothes, my wife and I each had our own walk-in closet filled with them.

Just having this new relationship in my life changed the way that I looked at what I have been given. My material excess and his material need made for a confusing symbiotic relationship. We both knew there was no way that I could fully grasp what it would feel like to not have a physical place to sit down and process the day.

But there was also an understanding that he could never fully understand the things that I own. Our worlds were lived far apart, yet in the same square mile. I wish everyone had the opportunity to know Clarence, or someone like him. They encourage us to a distinct change needed in our own lives. An unsettled ambition that we know needs to be different. The truth is: I have more than enough and I believe many people can relate.

When we choose to live on less, it creates the potential to do much more for others. Jeff Shinabarger is the founder of Plywood People, an innovative community addressing social needs through creative services.

I highly recommend it to you. His new book, Things That Matter , will be published in April. Follow on Twitter Like on Facebook. The more you give, the easier is to understand and appreciate those feelings. Rather than filling your life with more needless junk, you can use your wealth to better the lives of others.

Last Friday I gave an old duvet, soon to be discarded, to a homeless person living in a shop entrance, at a nearby city. Definitely some interesting thoughts. I think, a society where we have so much, we often do forget to realize how much we actually have.

This was really beautiful and heart-warming. I have a feeling from the nature of this piece that Jeff was generous in other ways than just giving him money in exchange for services, but just the same, I was left wondering about the limits of this friendship.

I think it would humanize the situation more than just exchanging money for services. In any case, I still think the overall sentiment of the piece is lovely and thought-provoking. Good for you for even noticing someone with less.

I hope your able to step up and help him get into a apartment and give of your time to better his life. I worked with the hiomeless for 30 years and they are you and I, with more difficult circumstances.

I live in less then square feet with my daughter. We have a fabulous life that is authentic, without material posessions and we enjoy every day in our garden, reading, cooking fro scratch eveyr day and pursuing hobbies instead of shopping.

Living on less really does give you a better perspective that is more real and brings more value to your life. It also is good for the soul! I would suggest you try to do away with as many material posessions as you can, that is a start. Your products should offer fun for the whole family, not just the most daring. At Wibit, safety is our main priority.

Higher products are easily affected by wind, which can cause them to become unstable and dangerous. Making sure a huge product is properly lifeguarded requires more staff to cover all the sidelines and the extreme distance between the top of the product and the water.

Every owner knows that accidents are bad for business. Extremely high products must be installed in very deep water. The EN ISO standard defines a specific minimum water depth based on product height, that must always be followed. A water depth of at least 4m is required for a 6m product — that can be far from shore. This means you will need more manpower for the installation, anchoring, and handling of extremely high products.

The sheer mass of a product of this size will easily require more than 5 tons in anchor weights to hold the product safely in place. Defects or tears in products of this size are more likely to occur and are difficult to repair. The bigger the product, the more time it takes to find a hole and repair it.



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