Steve M.
Veteran
Attachment is known to be the cause of great suffering in many spiritual traditions. Happiness comes from letting go of things, including their results. You have summarized the essence of Zen, so listen well to what you said about getting, then letting go. It's something that affects all living beings every day on all levels.
My personal advice (don't you just love unsolicited advice?) is, don't do it. That is a lot of money in my world. You could get a really, really good camera (an M8 is capable of beautiful shots, and no one, including yourself probably, is gonna know the difference in pics between it and an M10). It's just a case of newer camera, full frame, all that vs used. Even the old, by digital standards, Epson R-D1 cameras took great shots, especially in B&W. The image quality is always controlled by the thing looking through the viewfinder, not the camera :]
You could free up a lot of money if you went with something less costly, and have a lot of fun playing w/ the cost savings. Besides, you never know if it may be needed for an out of the blue health event later, a quick trip to Hawaii, all manner of things.
My personal advice (don't you just love unsolicited advice?) is, don't do it. That is a lot of money in my world. You could get a really, really good camera (an M8 is capable of beautiful shots, and no one, including yourself probably, is gonna know the difference in pics between it and an M10). It's just a case of newer camera, full frame, all that vs used. Even the old, by digital standards, Epson R-D1 cameras took great shots, especially in B&W. The image quality is always controlled by the thing looking through the viewfinder, not the camera :]
You could free up a lot of money if you went with something less costly, and have a lot of fun playing w/ the cost savings. Besides, you never know if it may be needed for an out of the blue health event later, a quick trip to Hawaii, all manner of things.