Alternatively, how do I notice when people are fleecing me for trivial amounts of money, so I don’t feel like a chump afterwards?
Absolutely perfect wording. My same thought at the register was that $2.97 was hardly worth fussing over. When my mental playback set in on the way out the door and to my car, my emotions/self-image begged to differ.
I’m pretty sure the feeling of being a chump (for me at least) is a social response to someone having gotten more out of you than you needed to give them, rather than a response to being unhappy with the exchange.
I sometimes get it when I retrospectively discover I paid more for something than I needed to, but it’s at its strongest when there’s an actual agent involved who I can point to and say “you, you took more money from me than you needed to, you scoundrel!” If I buy something online, when I could’ve gotten it somewhat cheaper on a different site, I just shrug it off.
Absolutely perfect wording. My same thought at the register was that $2.97 was hardly worth fussing over. When my mental playback set in on the way out the door and to my car, my emotions/self-image begged to differ.
I’m pretty sure the feeling of being a chump (for me at least) is a social response to someone having gotten more out of you than you needed to give them, rather than a response to being unhappy with the exchange.
I sometimes get it when I retrospectively discover I paid more for something than I needed to, but it’s at its strongest when there’s an actual agent involved who I can point to and say “you, you took more money from me than you needed to, you scoundrel!” If I buy something online, when I could’ve gotten it somewhat cheaper on a different site, I just shrug it off.