Buffalo wrote:...making excuses for why you're exempt...
That does not seem to be the case -- so far as I can tell.
During the 1980s I essentially abandoned all possessions, save for
my clothing and whatever sustenance I could secure on a
day-to-day basis. I lived that way for about three years before
moving on to a volunteer teaching job in China, with very little
accumulation of possessions for years thereafter.
I was not attached to that renunciation -- nor do I feel attached to
the home, books, furniture, etc. that my wife and I have accumulated
since those days. I was happy without all the "stuff" and I'm fairly
certain that I could remain happy now, with or without it.
There was a show about "hoarders" on TV recently. The fellow
there featured was given an opportunity to visit a local junk yard,
and thus add to his already overflowing collection of odds and ends.
He gleefully accepted, and then fell into utter despair when his
children forbid the new addition of junk, and began to clean up his
home, throwing out vast amounts of the stuff.
That's an extreme case, but it demonstrates that attachments to
material possessions can bring on even more human suffering.
UD