It's there. I said I'd buy a Blu-ray recorder that can record 2 channels at the same time, but my wife decided not to record 1 channel for 10,000 yen. Well, I thought it would be good if it was what the person himself wanted, but after all, every time there was an incident, I thought, “So I wish I had given another 10,000 yen...”
However, it is Buddhism that doesn't drag on such thoughts.
“Careful selection of people makes them poor.” Whether it's a car, motorcycle, PC, marriage hunting, choosing a monk, or choosing a job, that's the case. Careful selection means getting rid of a satisfactory hurdle limit. It's a horrible affliction that makes familiar things obsolete from end to end. The worry of this evaluation and careful selection is called taking (shu).
Not carefully selected, not carefully... because you carefully select, you become poor... because you aim for the best, you become poor... If you develop a habit of careful selection, remember that the monk said that.
And now, let's chew on the happiness in front of us.