The Forum > General Discussion > Status - A Universal Human Need?
Status - A Universal Human Need?
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In reference to Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs – Self Actualization and Self Esteem being at the top of his Needs Pyramid how is status achieved and how important is it? What is status?
Status might be achieved through wealth, power or celebrity but less so through service. Some degree of status is accorded to ‘service achievers’ such as many Australians of the Year however the core of status still sits in the area of wealth accumulation. Status in poorer tribal communities might have come from who can bag the biggest elk.
Many downshifters speak about differences in the way they are treated –based on position rather than values, work ethic or value as a human being (to some extent).
I also found this difference in status quite marked, however much later, I no longer cared and now enjoy the freedom and peace in that lifestyle choice. I wonder if caring too much about status can be more an impediment to satisfying needs.
What do others think? Is status important to self-esteem or is it when we no longer worry about these mundane matters, we reach a higher level of Maslow’s Self-actualization or Self-transcendence?
Would (theoretically) shifting values of status to the idea of service “change the very nature of the economic game we are destructively playing” (Wann) and address some of the disconnects (family time, divorce rates, pace, healthy eating) characterised by our obsession with growth and productivity?