If you want to ensure she won’t regret the choice, go shopping together!
You will pay extra, as in you will pay more than the ring is worth. If you buy a diamond ring, turn around and try to sell it back, they’ll give you something like 30% for it.
You will pay extra, as in you will pay more than the ring is worth. If you buy a diamond ring, turn around and try to sell it back, they’ll give you something like 30% for it.
This has always struck me as such a strange argument against buying a diamond ring, because it’s true about every retail purchase. If you buy a chair, then turn around and try to sell it back to the store, you’d be lucky to get 30%, but no-one thinks that’s an argument for sitting on the floor. You buy a chair because you want to sit on it, not as the start of a complicated chair-resale scheme. Similarly, you buy a diamond ring because you (or your beloved) want to wear it.
Note: I am not blaming you in particular, because this is a popular argument, but talk about a selective demand for rigour!
If you want to ensure she won’t regret the choice, go shopping together!
You will pay extra, as in you will pay more than the ring is worth. If you buy a diamond ring, turn around and try to sell it back, they’ll give you something like 30% for it.
Also, listen to this: http://freakonomics.com/2015/04/16/diamonds-are-a-marriage-counselors-best-friend-a-new-freakonomics-radio-podcast/
This has always struck me as such a strange argument against buying a diamond ring, because it’s true about every retail purchase. If you buy a chair, then turn around and try to sell it back to the store, you’d be lucky to get 30%, but no-one thinks that’s an argument for sitting on the floor. You buy a chair because you want to sit on it, not as the start of a complicated chair-resale scheme. Similarly, you buy a diamond ring because you (or your beloved) want to wear it.
Note: I am not blaming you in particular, because this is a popular argument, but talk about a selective demand for rigour!